"C. J. Cherryh - Chanur 1 - The Pride Of Chanur" - читать интересную книгу автора (Cherryh C J)Copyright O 1981, 1982, by
C.J. Cherryh. All Rights Reserved. Map of Compact Space by
David A. Cherry. Cover art by Michael Whelan. For color prints of
Michael Whelan paintings, please contact: Glass Onion Graphics, P.O.
Box 88 Brookfield, CT 06804 DAW Book Collectors No.
464.
I There had been something
loose about the station dock all morning, skulking in amongst the
gantries and the lines and the canisters which were waiting to be
moved, lurking wherever shadows fell among the rampway accesses of
the many ships at dock at Meetpoint. It was pale, naked,
starved-looking in what fleeting glimpse anyone on The Pride of
Chanur had had of it. Evidently no one had reported it to station
authorities, nor did The Pride. Involving oneself in others' concerns
at Meetpoint Station, where several species came to trade and
provision, was ill-advised -- at least until one was personally
bothered. Whatever it was, it was bipedal, brachiate, and quick at
making itself unseen. It had surely gotten away from someone, and
likeliest were the kif, who had a thieving finger in everything, and
who were not above kidnapping. Or it might be some large, bizarre
animal: the mahendo'sat were inclined to the keeping and trade of
strange pets, and Station had been displeased with them in that
respect on more than one occasion. So far it had done nothing. Stolen
nothing. No one wanted to get involved in question and answer between
original owners and station authorities; and so far no official
statement had come down from those station authorities and no notice
of its loss had been posted by any ship, which itself argued that a
wise person should not ask questions. The crew reported it only to
the captain and chased it, twice, from The Pride's loading area. Then
the crew got to work on necessary duties, having settled the
annoyance to their satisfaction. It was the last matter on
the mind of the noble, the distinguished captain Pyanfar Chanur, who
was setting out down her own rampway for the docks. She was hani,
this captain, splendidly maned and bearded in red-gold, which reached
in silken curls to the middle of her bare, sleek-pelted chest, and
she was dressed as befitted a hani of captain's rank, blousing
scarlet breeches tucked up at her waist with a broad gold belt, with
silk cords of every shade of red and orange wrapping that about, each
knotted cord with a pendant jewel on its dangling end. Gold finished
the breeches at her knees. Gold filigree was her armlet. And a row of
fine gold rings and a large pendant pearl decorated the tufted sweep
of her left ear. She strode down her own rampway in the security of
ownership, still high-blooded from a quarrel with her niece -- and
yelled and bared claws as the intruder came bearing down on her. She landed one raking,
startled blow which would have held a hani in the encounter, but the
hairless skin tore and it hurtled past her, taller than she was. It
skidded round the bending of the curved ramp tube and bounded right
into the ship, trailing blood all the way and leaving a bloody
handprint on the rampway's white plastic wall. Pyanfar gaped in outrage
and pelted after, claws scrabbling for traction on the flooring
plates. "Hilfy!" she shouted ahead; her niece had been in
the lower corridor. Pyanfar made it into the airlock, hit the bar of
the com panel there and punched all-ship. "Alert! Hilfy! Call
the crew in! Something's gotten aboard. Seal yourself into the
nearest compartment and call the crew." She flung open the
locker next the com unit, grubbed a pistol and scrambled in pursuit
of the intruder. No trouble at all tracking it, with the dotted red
trail on the white decking. The track led left at the first
cross-corridor, which was deserted -- the intruder must have gone
left again, starting to box the square round the lift shafts. Pyanfar
ran, heard a shout from that intersecting corridor and scrambled for
it: Hilfy! She rounded the corner at a slide and came up short on a
tableau, the intruder's hairless, red-running back and young Hilfy
Chanur holding the corridor beyond with nothing but bared claws and
adolescent bluster. "Idiot!" Pyanfar
spat at Hilfy, and the intruder turned on her of a sudden, much
closer. It brought up short in a staggered crouch, seeing the gun
aimed two-handed at itself. It might have sense not to rush a weapon;
might . . . but that would turn it right back at Hilfy, who stood
unarmed behind. Pyanfar braced to fire on the least movement. It stood rigidly still in
its crouch, panting from its running and its wound. "Get out of
there," Pyanfar said to Hilfy. "Get back." The
intruder knew about hani claws now; and guns; but it might do
anything, and Hilfy, an indistinction in her vision which was
tunneled wholly on the intruder, stayed stubbornly still. "Move!"
Pyanfar shouted. The intruder shouted too,
a snarl which almost got it shot; and drew itself upright and
gestured to the center of its chest, twice, defiant. Go on and shoot,
it seemed to invite her. That intrigued Pyanfar.
The intruder was not attractive. It had a bedraggled gold mane and
beard, and its chest fur, almost invisible, narrowed in a line down
its heaving belly to vanish into what was, legitimately, clothing, a
rag almost nonexistent in its tatters and obscured by the dirt which
matched the rest of its hairless hide. Its smell was rank. But a
straight carriage and a wild-eyed invitation to its enemies . . .
that deserved a second thought. It knew guns; it wore at least a
token of clothing; it drew its line and meant to hold its territory.
Male, maybe. It had that over-the-brink look in its eyes. "Who are you?"
Pyanfar asked slowly, in several languages one after the other,
including kif. The intruder gave no sign of understanding any of
them. "Who?" she repeated. It crouched slowly, with a
sullen scowl, all the way to the deck, and extended a blunt-nailed
finger and wrote in its own blood which was liberally puddled about
its bare feet. It made a precise row of symbols, ten of them, and a
second row which began with the first symbol prefaced by the second,
second with second, second with third . . . patiently, with
increasing concentration despite the growing tremors of its hand,
dipping its finger and writing, mad fixation on its task. "What's it doing?"
asked Hilfy, who could not see from her side. "A writing system,
probably numerical notation. It's no animal, niece." The intruder looked up at
the exchange, -- stood up, an abrupt move which proved injudicious
after its loss of blood. A glassy, desperate look came into its eyes,
and it sprawled in the puddle and the writing, slipping in its own
blood in trying to get up again. "Call the crew,"
Pyanfar said levelly, and this time Hilfy scurried off in great
haste. Pyanfar stood where she was, pistol in hand, until Hilfy was
out of sight down another corridor, then, assured that there was no
one to see her lapse of dignity, she squatted down with the gun in
both hands and loosely between her knees. The intruder still
struggled, propped itself up with its bloody back against the wall,
elbow pressed against that deeper starting-point of the scratches on
its side, which was the source of most of the blood. Its pale blue
eyes, for all their glassiness, seemed to have sense in them. It
looked back at her warily, with seeming mad cynicism. "You speak kif?"
Pyanfar asked again. A flicker of those eyes, which might mean
anything. Not a word from it. It started shivering, which was shock
setting in. Sweat had broken out on its naked skin. It never ceased
to look at her. Running broke into the
corridors. Pyanfar stood up quickly, not to be caught thus engaged
with the creature. Hilfy came hurrying back from her direction, the
crew arriving from the other, and Pyanfar stepped aside as they
arrived and the intruder tried to scramble off in retreat. The crew
laid hands on it and jerked it skidding along the bloody puddle. It
cried out and tried to grapple with them, but they had it on its
belly in the first rush and a blow dazed it. "Gently!"
Pyanfar yelled at them, but they had it then, got its arms lashed at
its back with one of their belts, tied its ankles together and got
off it, their fur as bloody as the intruder, who continued a feeble
movement. "Do it no more
damage," Pyanfar said. "I'll have it clean, thank you,
watered, fed, and healthy, but keep it restrained. Prepare me
explanations how it got face to face with me in the rampway, and if
one of you bleats a word of this outside the ship I'll sell you to
the kif." "Captain," they
murmured, down-eared in deference. They were second and third cousins
of hers, two sets of sisters, one set large and one small, and
equally chagrined. "Out," she said.
They snatched the intruder up by the binding of its arms and prepared
to drag it. "Careful!" Pyanfar hissed, reminding them, and
they were gentler in pulling it along. "You," Pyanfar
said then to Hilfy, her brother's daughter, who lowered her ears and
turned her face aside -- short-maned, with an adolescent's beginning
beard, Hilfy Chanur presently and with a air of martyrdom. I'll send
you back shaved if you disobey another order. Understand me?" Hilfy made a bow facing
her, duly contrite. "Aunt," she said, and straightened,
contriving to make it all thoughtfully graceful; -- looked her
straight in the eyes with offended worship. "Huh," Pyanfar
said. Hilfy bowed a second time and padded past as softly as
possible. In common blue breeches like the crew, was Hilfy, but the
swagger was all Chanur, and not quite ludicrous on so young a woman.
Pyanfar snorted, fingered the silk of her beard into order, looked
down in sober thought at the wallowed smear where the Outsider had
fallen, obliterating all the writing from the eyes of the crew. So, so, so.
Pyanfar postponed her trip
to station offices, walked back to the lower-deck operations center,
sat down at the com board amid all the telltales of cargo status and
lines and grapples and the routine operations The Pride carried on
automatically. She keyed in the current messages, sorted through
those and found nothing, then delved into The Pride's recording of
all messages received since docking, and all which had flowed through
station communications aimed at others. She searched first for
anything kif-sent, a rapid flicker of lines on the screen in front of
her, all operational chatter in transcription -- a very great deal of
it. Then she queried for notice of anything lost, and after that, for
anything escaped. Mahendo'sat? she queried
then, staying constantly to her own ship's records of incoming
messages, of the sort which flowed constantly in a busy station, and
in no wise sending any inquiry into the station's comp system. She
recycled the whole record last of all, ran it past at eye-blurring
speed, looking for any key word about escapes or warnings of alien
presence at Meetpoint. So indeed. No one was
going to say a word on the topic. The owners still did not want to
acknowledge publicly that they had lost this item. The Chanur were
not lack-witted, to announce publicly that they had found it. Or to
trust that the kif or whoever had lost it were not at this moment
turning the station inside out with a surreptitious search. Pyanfar turned off the
machine, flicked her ears so that the rings on the left one jangled
soothingly. She got up and paced the center, thrust her hands into
her belt and thought about alternatives, and possible gains. It would
be a dark day indeed when a Chanur went to the kif to hand back an
acquisition. She could justifiably make a claim on it regarding legal
liabilities and the invasion of a hani ship. Public hazard, it was
called. But there were no outside witnesses to the intrusion, and the
kif, almost certainly to blame, would not yield without a wrangle;
which meant court;, and prolonged proximity to kif, whose gray,
wrinkle-hided persons she loathed; whose naturally dolorous faces she
loathed; whose jeremiad of miseries and wrongs done them was constant
and unendurable. A Chanur, in station court with a howling mob of kif
... and it would go to that extreme if kif came claiming this
intruder. The whole business was unpalatable, in all its
ramifications. Whatever it was and
wherever it came from, the creature was educated. That hinted in turn
at other things, at cogent reasons why the kif might indeed be upset
at the loss of this item and why they wished so little publicity in
the search. She punched in intraship. "Hilfy." "Aunt?"
Hilfy responded after a moment. "Find out the intruder's
condition." "I'm watching them treat it now. Aunt, I think
it's he, if there's any analogy of form and -- " "Never
mind zoology. How badly is it hurt?" "It's in shock, but it
seems stronger than it was a moment ago. It -- he -- got quiet when
we managed to get an anesthetic on the scratches. I think he figured
then we were trying to help, and he quit fighting. We thought the
drug had got him. But he's breathing better now." "It's probably just
waiting its chance. When you get it safely locked up, you take your
turn at dockwork, since you were so eager to have a look outside. The
others will show you what to do. Tell Haral to get herself to
lowerdeck op. Now." "Yes, aunt." Hilfy had no sulking
in her tone. The last reprimand must not have worn off. Pyanfar shut
down the contact and listened to station chatter in the interim,
wishing in vain for something to clarify the matter. Haral showed up on the
run, soaking wet, blood-spattered and breathless. She bowed shortly
in the doorway, straightened. She was oldest of the crew, was Haral,
tall, with a dark scar across her broad nose and another across the
belly, but those were from her rash youth. "Clean up,"
Pyanfar said. "Take cash and go marketing, cousin. Shop the
second-hand markets as if you were on your own. The item I want may
be difficult to locate, but not impossible, I think, in such a place
as Meetpoint. Some books, if you will: a mahendo'sat lexicon; a
mahendo'sat version of their holy writings. The philosopher
Kohboranua or another of that ilk, I'm completely indifferent. And a
mahendo'sat symbol translator, its modules and manuals, from
elementary up, as many levels as you can find . . . above all that
item. The rest is all cover. If questioned -- a client's taken a
religious interest." Haral's, eyes flickered,
but she bowed in acceptance of the order and asked nothing. Pyanfar
put her hand deep into her pocket and came up with a motley
assortment of large-denomination coinage, a whole stack of it. "And four gold
rings," Pyanfar added. "Captain?" "To remind you all
that The Pride minds its own business. Say so when you give them.
It'll salve your feelings, I hope, if we have to miss taking a
liberty here, as well we may. But talk and rouse suspicion about
those items, Haral Araun, and you won't have an ear to wear it on." Haral grinned and bowed a
third time. "Go," said
Pyanfar, and Haral darted out in zealous application. So. It was a risk, but a
minor one. Pyanfar considered matters for a moment, finally walked
outside the op room and down the corridor, took the lift up to
central level, where her own quarters were, out of the stench and the
reek of disinfectant which filled the lower deck. She closed the door behind
her with a sigh, went to the bath and washed her hands, seeing that
there remained no shred of flesh in the undercurve of her claws --
checked over her fine silk breeches to be sure no spatter of blood
had gotten on them. She applied a dash of cologne to clear the memory
from her nostrils. Stupidity. She was getting
dull as the stsho, to have missed a grip on the intruder in the first
place: old was not a word she preferred to think about. Slow of mind,
woolgathering, that she struck like a youngster on her first forage.
Lazy. That was more like it. She patted her flat belly and decided
that the year-old complacent outletting of her belt had to be taken
in again. She was losing her edge. Her brother Kohan was still fit
enough, planet-bound as he was and not gifted with the time-stretch
of jump: he managed. Inter-male bickering and a couple of sons to
throw out of the domicile kept his blood circulating, and there was
usually a trio of mates in the house at any one time, with offspring
to chastise. About time, she thought, that she put The Pride into
home dock at Anuurn for a thorough refitting, and spend a layover
with her own mate Khym, high in the Kahin hills, in the Mahn estates.
Get the smell of the homeworld wind in her nostrils for a few months.
Do a little hunting, run off that extra notch on the belt. Check on
her daughter Tahy and see whether that son of hers was still roving
about or whether someone had finally broken his neck for him. Surely
the lad would have had the common courtesy to send a message through
Khym or Kohan if he had settled somewhere; and above all to her
daughter, who was, gods knew, grown and getting soft hanging about
her father's house, among a dozen other daughters, mostly
brotherless. Son Kara should settle himself with some unpropertied
wife and give his sister some gainful employment making him rich --
above all, settle and take himself out of his father's and his
uncle's way. Ambitious, that was Kara. Let the young rake try to move
in on his uncle Kohan and that would be the last of him. Pyanfar
flexed claws at the thought and recalled why all her shoreleaves were
short ones. But this now, this
business with this bit of live contraband which had strayed aboard,
which might be kif-owned . . . the honorable lord Kohan Chanur her
brother was going to have a word to say about his ship's carelessness
in letting such an incident reach their deck. And there was going to
be a major rearrangement in the household if Hilfy got hurt --
brotherless ; Hilfy, who had gotten to be too much Chanur to go
following after a brother if ever her mother gave her one. Hilfy
Chanur par Faha, who wanted the stars more than she wanted anything;
and who clung to her father as the one who could give them to her. It
was Hilfy's lifelong waited chance, this voyage, this apprenticeship
on The Pride. It had torn Kohan's doting soul to part from his
favorite; that was clear in the letter which had come with Hilfy. Pyanfar shook her head and
fretted. Depriving those four rag-eared crew of hers of a shoreleave
in the pursuit of this matter was one thing, but taking Hilfy home to
Anuurn while she sorted out a major quarrel with the kif was another.
It was expensive, curtailing their homeward routing. More, Hilfy's
pride would die a death, if she were the cause of that rerouting, if
she were made to face her sisters in her sudden return to the
household; and Pyanfar confessed herself attached to the imp, who
wanted what she had wanted at such an age, who most likely would come
to command a Chanur ship someday, perhaps even -- gods postpone the
hour -- The Pride itself. Pyanfar thought of such a legacy . . .
someday, someday that Kohan passed his prime and she did. Others in
the house of Chanur were jealous of Hilfy, waiting for some chance to
use their jealousy. But Hilfy was the best. The brightest and best,
like herself and like Kohan, and no one so far could prove otherwise.
Whatever young male one day won the Chanur holding from Kohan in his
decline had best walk warily and please Hilfy, or Hilfy might take
herself a mate who would tear the ears off the interloper. That was
the kind Hilfy was, loyal to her father and to the house. And ruining that spirit or
risking her life over that draggled Outsider was not worth it. Maybe,
Pyanfar thought, she should swallow the bitter mouthful and go dump
the creature on the nearest kif ship. She seriously considered it.
Choosing the wrong kif ship might afford some lively amusement: there
would be riot among the kif and consternation on the station. But
yielding was still, at bottom, distasteful. Gods! so that was how she
proposed teaching young Hilfy to handle difficulties. That was the
example she set... yielding up what she had, because she thought it
might be dangerous to hold it. She was getting soft. She
patted her belly again, decided against shoreleave at voyage's end,
another lying-up and another Mahn offspring to muddle things up.
Decided against retreat. She drew in a great breath and put on a grim
smile. Age came and the young grew old, but not too old, the gods
grant. This voyage, young Hilfy Chanur was going to learn to justify
that swagger she cut through the corridors of the ship; so, indeed
she was.
There was no leaving the
ship with matters aboard still in flux. Pyanfar went to the small
central galley, up the starboard curve from her quarters and the
bridge, stirred about to take a cup of gfi from the dispenser and sat
down at the counter by the oven to enjoy it at leisure, waiting until
her crew should have had ample time to have dealt with the Outsider.
She gave them a bit more, finally tossed the empty cup in the
sterilizer and got up and wandered belowdecks again, where the
corridors stank strongly of antiseptic and Tirun was lounging about,
leaning against the wall by the lowerdeck washroom door. "Well?"
Pyanfar asked. "We put it in there,
captain. Easiest to clean, by your leave. Haral left. Chur and Geran
and ker Hilfy are out doing the loading. Thought someone ought to
stay awhile by the door and listen, to be sure the creature's all
right." Pyanfar laid her hand on
the switch, looked back at Tirun -- Haral's sister and as broad and
solid, with the scars of youth well-weathered, the gold of successful
voyages winking from her left ear. The two of them together could
handle the Outsider, she reckoned, in any condition. "Does it
show any sign of coming out of its shock?" "It's quiet; shallow
breathing, staring somewhere else -- but aware what's going on.
Scared us a moment; we thought it'd gone into shock with the
medicine, but I think it just quieted down when the pain stopped. We
tried with the way we handled it, to make it understand we didn't
want to hurt it. Maybe it has that figured. We carried it in here and
it settled down and lay still . . . moved when made to move, but not
surly, more like it's stopped thinking, like it's stopped doing
anything it doesn't have to do. Worn out, I'd say." "Huh." Pyanfar
pressed the bar. The dark interior of the washroom smelled of
antiseptic too, the strongest they had. The lights were dimmed. The
air was stiflingly warm and carried an odd scent under the antiseptic
reek. Her eyes missed the creature a moment, searched anxiously and
located it in the corner, a heap of blankets between the shower stall
and the laundry . . . asleep or awake she could not tell with its
head tucked down in its forearms. A large container of water and a
plastic dish with a few meat chips and crumbs left rested beside it
on the tiles. Well, again. It was then carnivorous and not so
delicate after all, to have an appetite left. So much for its
collapse. "Is it restrained?" "It has chain enough
to get to the head if it understands what it's for." Pyanfar stepped back
outside and closed the door on it again. "Very likely it
understands. Tirun, it is sapient or I'm blind. Don't assume it can't
manipulate switches. No one is to go in there alone and no one's to
carry firearms near it. Pass that order to the others personally,
Hilfy too. -- Especially Hilfy." "Yes, captain."
Tirun's broad face was innocent of opinions. Gods knew what they were
going to do with the creature if they kept it. Tirun did not ask.
Pyanfar strolled off, meditating on the scene behind the washroom
door, the heap of deceptive blankets, the food so healthily consumed,
the avowed collapse ... no lackwit, this creature who had twice tried
her ship's security and on the third attempt, .succeeded in getting
through. Why The Pride? she wondered. Why her ship, out of all the
others at dock? Because they were last in the section, before the
bulkhead of the dock seal might force the creature to have left cover
somewhat, and it was the last available choice? Or was there some
other reason? She walked the corridor to
the airlock and the rampway, and out its curving ribbed length into
the chill air of the docks. She looked left as she came out, and
there was Hilfy, canister-loading with Chur and Geran, rolling the
big cargo containers off the stationside dolly and onto the moving
belt which would take the goods into The Pride's holds, paid freight
on its way to Urtur and Kura and Touin and Anuurn itself, stsho
cargo, commodities and textiles and medicines, ordinary stuff. Hilfy
paused at the sight of her, panting with her efforts and already
looking close to collapse -- stood up straight with her hands at her
sides and her ears back, belly heaving. It was hard work, shifting
those cans about, especially for the unskilled and unaccustomed. Chur
and Geran worked on, small of stature and wiry, knowing the points of
balance to an exactitude. Pyanfar affected not to notice her niece
and walked on with wide steps and nonchalant, smiling to herself the
while. Hilfy had been mightily indignant, barred from rushing out to
station market, to roam about unescorted, sightseeing on this her
first call at Meetpoint, where species docked which never called at
homeworld . . . sights she had missed at Urtur and Kura, likewise
pent aboard ship or held close to The Pride's berth. The imp had too
much enthusiasm for her own good. So she got the look at Meetpoint's
famous docks she had argued to have, now, this very day -- but not
the sightseeing tour of her young imaginings. Next station-call, Pyanfar
thought, next station-call her niece might have learned enough to let
loose unescorted, when the wild-eyed eagerness had worn off, when she
had learned from this incident that there were hazards on dockside
and that a little caution was in order when prowling the friendliest
of ports. Herself, she took the
direct route, not without watching her surroundings.
II A call on Meetpoint
Station officials was usually a leisurely and pleasant affair. The
stsho, placid and graceful, ran the station offices and bureaus on
this side of the station, where oxygen breathers docked. Methodical
to a fault, the stsho, tedious and full of endless subtle meanings in
their pastel ornament and the tattooings on their pearly hides. They
were another hairless species -- stalk-thin, tri-sexed and hanilike
only by the wildest stretch of the imagination, if eyes, nose, and
mouth in biologically convenient order was similarity. Their manners
were bizarre among themselves. But stsho had learned to suit their
methodical plodding and their ceremoniousness to hani taste, which
was to have a soft chair, a ready cup of herbal tea, a plate of
exotic edibles and an individual as pleasant as possible about the
forms and the statistics, who could make it all like a social chat. This stsho was unfamiliar.
Stsho changed officials more readily than they changed ornament --
either a different individual had come into control of Meetpoint
Station, Pyanfar reckoned, or a stsho she had once known had entered
a New Phase, -- new doings? Pyanfar wondered, at the nudge of a small
and prickly instinct -- new doings? Loose Outsiders and stsho power
shuffles? All changes were suspect when something was out of pocket.
If it was the same as the previous stationmaster, it had changed the
pattern of all the elaborate silver filigree and plumes -- azure and
lime now, not azure and mint; and if it were the case, it was not at
all polite to recognize the refurbished person, even if a hani
suspected identity. The stsho proffered
delicacies and tea, bowed, folded up gtst stalklike limbs -- he, she,
or even it, hardly applied with stsho -- and seated gtst-self in gtst
bowlchair, a cushioned indentation in the office floor. The necessary
table rose on a pedestal before it. Pyanfar occupied the facing
depression, lounged on an elbow to reach for the smoked fish the
stsho's lesser-status servant had placed on a similar table at her
left. The servant, ornamentless and no one, sat against the wall,
knees tucked higher than gtst head, arms about bony ankles, waiting
usefulness. The stsho official likewise took a sample of the fish,
poured tea, graceful gestures of stsho elegance and hospitality.
Plumed and cosmetically augmented brows nodded delicately over
moonstone eyes as gtst looked up -- white brows shading to lilac and
azure; azure tracings on the domed brow shaded to lime over the
hairless skull. Another stsho, of course, might read the patterns
with exactitude, the station in life, the chosen Mood for this Phase
of gtst existence, the affiliations and modes and thereby, gtst
approachability. Non-stsho were forgiven their trespasses; and stsho
in Retiring mode were not likely filling public offices. Pyanfar made one attempt
on the Outsider topic, delicately: "Things have been quiet
hereabouts?" "Oh, assuredly."
The stsho beamed, smiled with narrow mouth and narrow eyes, a
carnivore habit, though the stsho were not aggressive. "Assuredly." "Also on my world,"
Pyanfar said, and sipped her tea, an aroma of spices which delighted
all her sinuses. "Herbal. But what?" The stsho smiled with
still more breadth. "Ah. Imported from my world. We introduce it
here, in our offices. Duty free. New cultivation techniques make it
available for export. The first time, you understand. The very first
shipment offered. Very rare, a taste of my very distant world."
"Cost?" They discussed it. It was
outrageous. But the stsho came down, predictably, particularly when
tempted with a case of hani delicacies promised to be carted up from
dockside to the offices. Pyanfar left the necessary interview in high
spirits. Barter was as good to her as breathing. She took the lift down to
dock level, straight down, without going the several corridors over
in lateral which she could have taken. She walked the long way back
toward The Pride's berth, strolled casually along the dockside which
horizoned upward before and behind, unfurling as she moved, offices
and businesses on the one hand and the tall mobile gantries on the
other, towers which aimed their tops toward the distant axis of
Meetpoint, so that the most distant appeared insanely atilt on the
curving horizon. Display boards at periodic intervals gave
information of arrivals, departures, and ships in dock, from what
port and bearing what sort of cargo, and she scanned them as she
walked. A car shot past her on the
dock, from behind: globular and sealed, it wove along avoiding
canisters and passers-by and lines with greater speed than an
automated vehicle would use. That was a methane-breather, more than
likely, some official from beyond the dividing line which separated
the incompatible realities of Meetpoint. Tc'a ran that side of the
station, sinuous beings and leathery gold, utterly alien in their
multipartite brains -- they traded with the knnn and the chi, kept
generally to themselves and had little to say or to do with hani or
even with the stsho, with whom they shared the building and operation
of Meetpoint. Tc'a had nothing in common with this side of the line,
not even ambitions; and the knnn and the chi were stranger still,
even less participant within the worlds and governments and
territories of the Compact. Pyanfar watched the vehicle kite along,
up the horizon of Meetpoint's docks, and the section seal curtained
it from view as it jittered along in zigzag haste which itself argued
a tc'a mind at the controls. There was no trouble from them ... no
way that they could have dealt with the Outsider: their brains were
as unlike as their breathing apparatus. She paused, stared up at the
nearby registry boards with a wrinkling of her nose and a stroking of
her beard, sorting through the improbable and untranslatable
methane-breather names for more familiar registrations -- for
potential trouble, and for possible allies of use in a crisis. There
was scant picking among the latter at this apogee of The Pride's
rambling course. There was one other hani
ship in dock, Handur's Voyager. She knew a few of the Handur family,
remotely. They were from Anuurn's other hemisphere, neither rivals
nor close allies, since they shared nothing on Anuurn's surface.
There were a lot of stsho ships, which was to be expected on this
verge of stsho space. A lot of mahendo'sat, through whose territory
The Pride had lately come. And on the side of
trouble, there were four kif, one of which she knew: Kut, captained
by one Ikkkukkt, an aging scoundrel whose style was more to allow
another ship's canisters to edge up against and among his on
dockside; and to bluff down any easily confused owners who might
protest. He was only small trouble, alone. Kif in groups could be
different, and she did not know about the others. "Hai," she
called, passing a mahendo'sat docking area, at a ship called
Mahijiru, where some of that tall, dark-furred kind were minding
their own business, cursing and scratching their heads over some
difficulty with a connection collar, a lock-ring disassembled in
order all over the deck among their waiting canisters. "You fare
well this trip, mahe?" "Ah, captain."
The centermost scrambled up and others did the same as this one
stepped toward her, treading carefully among the pieces of the
collar. Any well-dressed hani was captain to a mahendo'sat, who had
rather err by compliment than otherwise. But this one by his gilt
teeth was likely the captain of his own freighter. "You trade?" "Trade what?" "What got?" "Hai, mahe, what
need?" The mahendo'sat grinned, a
brilliant golden flash, sharp-edged. No one of course began trade by
admitting to necessity. "Need a few less kif
onstation." Pyanfar answered her own question, and the
mahendo'sat whistled laughter and bobbed agreement. "True, true,"
Goldtooth said somewhere between humor and outrage, as if he had a
personal tale to tell. "Whining kif we wish you end of dock,
good captain, honest captain. Kut no good. Hukan more no good; and
Lukkur same. But Hinukku make new kind deal no good. Wait at station,
wait no get same you course with Hinukku, good captain." "What, armed?" "Like hani, maybe."
Goldtooth grinned when he said it, and Pyanfar laughed, pretended it
a fine joke. "When do hani ever
have weapons?" she asked. The mahe thought that a
fine joke too. "Trade you two
hundredweight silk," Pyanfar offered. "Station duty take
all my profit." "Ah. Too bad. -- Hard
work, that." She scuffed a foot toward the ailing collar. "I
can lend you very good hani tools, fine steel, two very good hani
welders, Faha House make." "I lend you good
quality artwork." "Artwork!" "Maybe someday great
mahen artist, captain." "Then come to me;
I'll keep my silk." "Ah, ah, I make you
favor with artwork, captain, but no, I ask you take no chance. I have
instead small number very fine pearl like you wear." "Ah." "Make you security
for lend tools and welders. My man he come by you soon borrow tools.
Show you pearl same time." "Five pearls." "We see tools you see
two pearls." "You bring four." "Fine. You pick best
three." "All four if they're
not of the best, my good, my great mahe captain." "You see," he
vowed. "Absolute best. Three." "Good." She
grinned cheerfully, touched hand to hand with the thick-nailed mahe
and strolled off, grinning still for all passersby to see; but the
grin faded when she was past the ring of their canisters and crossing
the next berth. So. Kif trouble had
docked. There were kif and kif, and in that hierarchy of thieves,
there were a few ship captains who tended to serve as ringleaders for
highstakes mischief; and some elect who were very great trouble
indeed. Mahendo'sat translation always had its difficulties, but it
sounded uncomfortably like one of the latter. Stay in dock, the
mahendo'sat had advised; don't chance putting out till it leaves.
That was mahendo'sat strategy. It did not always work. She could keep
The Pride at dock and run up a monstrous bill, and still have no
guarantee of a safe course out; or she could pull out early and hope
that the kif would not suspect what they had aboard -- hope that the
kif, at minimum, were waiting for something easier to chew than a
mouthful of hani. Hilfy. That worry rode her
mind. Ten quiet voyages, ten voyages of aching, bone-weary
tranquility . . . and now this one. The docks looked all quiet ahead,
up where The Pride had docked, her people working out by the loading
belt as they should be doing, taking aboard the mail and the freight.
Haral was back, working among them; she was relieved to see that.
That was Tirun outside now, and Hilfy must have gone in: the other
two were Geran and Chur, slight figures next to Haral and Tirun. She
found no cause to hurry. Hilfy had probably had enough by now,
retreated inside to guard duty over the Outsider, gods grant that she
stayed outside the door and refrained from meddling. But the crew caught sight
of her as she came, and of a sudden expressions took on desperate
relief and ears pricked up, so that her heart clenched with
foreknowledge of something direly wrong. "Hilfy," she asked
first, as Haral came walking out to meet her: the other three stayed
at their loading, all too busy for those looks of anxiety, playing
the part of workers thoroughly occupied. "Ker Hilfy's safe
inside," Haral said quickly. "Captain, I got the things you
ordered, put them in lowerdeck op, all of it; but there were kif
everywhere I went, captain, when I was off in the market. They were
prowling about the aisles, staring at everyone, buying nothing. I
finished my business and walked on back and they were still prowling
about. So I ordered ker Hilfy to go on in and send Tirun out here.
There are kif nosing about here of a sudden." "Doing what?" "Look beyond my
shoulder, captain." Pyanfar took a quick look,
a shift of her eyes. "Nothing," she said. But canisters
were piled there at the section seal, twenty, thirty of them, each as
tall as a hani and double-stacked, cover enough. She set her hand on
Haral's shoulder, walked her companionably back to the others.
"Haral, there's going to be a small stsho delivery and a
mahendo'sat with a three-pearl deal; both are true . . . watch them
both. But no others. There's one other hani ship docked far around
the rim, next the methane docks. I've not spoken with them. It's
Handur's Voyager." "Small ship." "And vulnerable.
We're going to take The Pride out, with all decent haste. I think it
can only get worse here. Tirun: a small task; get to Voyager. I don't
want to discuss the situation with them over com. Warn them that
there's a ship in dock named Hinukku and the word is out among the
mahendo'sat that this one is uncommonly bad trouble. And then get
yourself back here fast -- No, wait. A good tool kit and two good
welders -- drop them with the crew of the Mahijiru and take the
pearls in a hurry if you can get them. Seventh berth down. They'll
deserve that and more if I've put the kif onto them by asking
questions there. Go." "Yes, captain,"
Tirun breathed, and scurried off, ears back, up the service ramp
beside the cargo belt. Pyanfar cast a second look
at the double-stacked canisters in turning. No kif in sight. Haste,
she wished Tirun, hurry it. It was a quick trip inside to pull the
trade items from the automated delivery. Tirun came back with the
boxes under one arm and set out directly in the kind of reasonable
haste she might use on her captain's order. "Huh." Pyanfar
turned again and looked toward the shadow. There. By the canisters
after all. A kif stood there, tall and black-robed, with a long
prominent snout and hunched stature. Pyanfar stared at it directly --
waved to it with energetic and sarcastic camaraderie as she started
toward it. It stepped at once back
into the shelter of the canisters and the shadows. Pyanfar drew a
great breath, flexed her claws and kept walking, round the curve of
the canister stacks and softly -- face to face with the towering kif.
The kif looked down on her with its red-rimmed dark eyes and
longnosed face and its dusty black robes like the robes of all other
kif, of one tone with the gray skin ... a bit of shadow come to life.
"Be off," she told it. "I'll have no canister-mixing.
I'm onto your tricks." "Something of ours
has been stolen." She laughed, helped by
sheer surprise. "Something of yours stolen, master thief? That's
a wonder to tell at home." "Best it find its way
back to us. Best it should, captain." She laid back her ears and
grinned, which was not friendliness. "Where is your
crewwoman going with those boxes?" the kif asked. She said nothing. Extruded
claws. "It would not be,
Captain, that you've somehow found that lost item." "What, lost, now?" "Lost and found
again, I think." "What ship are you,
kif?" "If you were as
clever as you imagine you are, captain, you would know." "I like to know who
I'm talking to. Even among kif. I'll reckon you know my name,
skulking about out here. What's yours?" "Akukkakk is mine,
Chanur captain. Pyanfar Chanur. Yes, we know you. Know you well,
captain. We have become interested in you . . . thief." "Oh. Akukkakk of what
ship?" Her vision sharpened on the kif, whose robes were
marginally finer than usual, whose bearing had precious little kifish
stoop in dealing with shorter species, that hunch of shoulders and
thrusting forward of the head. This one looked at her the long way,
from all its height. "I'd like to know you as well, kif." "You will, hani. --
No. A last chance. We will redeem this prize you've found. I will
make you that offer." Her mustache-hairs drew
down, as at some offensive aroma. "Interesting if I had this
item. Is it round or flat, this strayed object? Or did one of your
own crew rob you, kif captain?" "You know its shape,
since you have it. Give it up, and be paid. Or don't -- and be paid,
hani, be paid then too." "Describe this item
to me." "For its safe return
-- gold, ten bars of gold, fine. Contrive your own descriptions." "I shall bear it in
mind, kif, should I find something unusual and kif-smelling. But so
far nothing." "Dangerous, hani." "What ship, kif?" "Hinukku." "I'll remember your
offer. Indeed I will, master thief." The kif said nothing more.
Towered erect and silent. She aimed a dry spitting toward its feet
and walked off, slow swagger. Hinukku, indeed. A whole
new kind of trouble, the mahendo'sat had said, and this surly kif or
another might have seen ... or talked to those who had seen. Gold,
they offered. Kif . . . offered ransom; and no common kif, either,
not that one. She walked with a prickling between her shoulder blades
and a multiplying apprehension for Tirun, who was now a small figure
walking off along the upcurving docks. No hope that the station
authorities would do anything to prevent a murder ... not one between
kif and hani. The stsho's neutrality consisted in retreat, and their
law in arbitrating after the fact. Stsho ships were the most
common victims of marauding kif, and still kif docked unchecked at
Meetpoint. Madness. A bristling ran up her back and her ears flicked,
jingling the rings. Hani might deal with the kif and teach them a
lesson, but there was no profit in it, not until moments like this
one. Divert every hani ship from profitable trade to kif-hunting?
Madness too ... until it was The Pride in question. "Pack it up out
here," she told her remaining crew when she reached them. "Get
those last cans on and shut it down. Get everything ready to break
dock. I'm going to call Tirun back here. It's worse than I thought." "I'll go after her,"
Haral said. "Do as I say, cousin
-- and keep Hilfy out of it." Haral fell back. Pyanfar
started off down the dock -- old habit, not to run; a reserve of
pride, of caution, of some instinct either good or ill. Still she did
not run in front of witnesses. She widened her strides until some
bystanders -- stsho -- did notice, and stared. She gained on Tirun.
Almost, almost within convenient shouting distance of Tirun, and
still a far, naked distance up the dock's upcurving course to reach
Handur's Voyager. Hinukku sat at dock for Tirun to pass before she
should come to the hani ship. But the mahendo'sat vessel Mahijiru was
docked before that, if only Tirun handled that extraneous errand on
the way, the logical thing to do with a heavy load under one arm.
Surely it was the logical thing, even considering the urgency of the
other message. Ah. Tirun did stop at the
mahendo'sat berth. Pyanfar breathed a gasp of relief, broke her own
rule at the last moment and sprinted behind some canisters, strode
right into the gathering which had begun to close about Tirun. She
clapped a startled mahendo'sat spectator on the arm, pulled it about
and thrust her way through to Tirun, grabbed her arm without
ceremony. "Trouble. Let's go, cousin." "Captain,"
Goldtooth exclaimed from her right. "You come back make new
bigger deal?" "Never mind. The
tools are a gift. Come on, Tirun." "Captain," Tirun
began, bewildered, being dragged back through the gathering of
mahendo'sat. Mahendo'sat gave way before them, their captain still
following them with confused chatter about welders and pearls. Kif. A black-clad half
ring of them appeared suddenly on the outskirts of the swirl of
dark-furred mahendo'sat. Pyanfar had Tirun's wrist and pulled her
forward. "Look out!" Tirun cried suddenly: one of the kif
had pulled a gun from beneath its robe. "Go!" Pyanfar
yelled, and they dived back among cursing and screaming mahendo'sat,
out again through a melee of kif who had circled behind the
canisters. Fire popped after them. Pyanfar bowled over a kif in their
path with a strike that should snap vertebrae and did not break
stride to find out. Tirun ran beside her; they sprinted with fire
popping smoke curls off the deck plates ahead of them. Suddenly a shot came from
the right hand. Tirun yelped and stumbled, limping wildly. More kif
along the dockfront offices, one very tall and familiar. Akukkakk,
with friends. "Earless bastard!" Pyanfar shouted, grabbed
Tirun afresh and kept going, dragged her behind the canisters of
another mahendo'sat ship in a hail of laser pops and the reek of
burned plastic. Tirun sagged in shock -- a curse and a jerk on the
arm got her running again, desperately: the burn ruptured and bled.
They darted an open space, having no choice: shrill harooing rang out
behind and on the right, kif on the hunt. A second shout roared out
from before them, another flash from guns, multicolor, at The Pride's
berth: The Pride's crew was returning fire, high for their sakes but
meaning business. Station alarms started going off, bass-tone
whooping. Red lights flashed on the walls and up the curve till the
ceiling vanished. Higher up the curve of the dock, station folk
scrambled in panic, hunting shelter. If there were kif among them,
they would come charging down from that direction too, at the crew's
backs. And Hilfy was out there at
that access, fourth in that line of their own guns -- laying down a
berserk pattern of fire. Pyanfar dragged Tirun through that line of
four by the scruff of the neck. Tirun twisted and fell on the plates
and Pyanfar helped her up again, not without a wild look back, at a
dockside where enemies fired from cover at her crew who had precious
little. "Board!" she yelled at the others with the last of
her wind, and herself skidded on the decking in turning for the
rampway. Haral retreated and grabbed Tirun's flailing arm from the
other side and Hilfy suddenly took Pyanfar's. Pyanfar looked back
again, willing to turn and fight. Geran and Chur were falling back in
orderly retreat behind them, still facing the direction of the kif
and firing -- the kif had been pinned back from advance into better
vantage. Hilfy pulled at her arm and Pyanfar shook free as they
reached the rampway's first door. "Come on," she shouted at
Geran and Chur; and the moment they retreated within, still firing,
she hit the door seal. The massive steel clanged and thumped shut and
the pair stumbled back out of the way; Hilfy darted in from across
the door and rammed the lock-lever down. Pyanfar looked round then
at Tirun, who was on her feet though sagging in Haral's arms, and
holding her upper right leg. Her blue breeches were dark with blood
from there to the fur of her calf and threading down to her foot in a
puddle, and she was muttering a steady stream of curses. "Move," Pyanfar
said. Haral took Tirun up in her arms and outright carried her, no
small load. They withdrew up the rampway curve into their own lock,
sealed that door and felt somewhat safer. "Captain," Chur
said, businesslike. "All lines are loose and cargo ramp is
disengaged. In case." "Well done,"
Pyanfar said, vastly relieved to hear it. They walked through the
airlock and round the bend into the main lower corridor. "Secure
the Outsider; sedate it all the way. You -- " she looked aside
at Tirun, who was trying to walk again with an arm across her
sister's shoulders. "Get a wrap on that leg fast. No time for
anything more. We're getting loose. I don't imagine Hinukku will
stand still for this and I don't want kif passing my tail while we're
nose-to-station. Everyone rig for maneuvers." "I can wrap my own
leg," Tirun said. "Just drop me in sickbay." "Hilfy," Pyanfar
said, collected her niece as she headed for the lift. "Disobedient,"
Pyanfar muttered when they were close. "Forgive," said
Hilfy. They entered the lift together; the door shut. Pyanfar fetched
the youngster a cuff which rocked her against the lift wall, and
pushed the mainlevel button. Hilfy righted herself and disdained even
to clap a hand to her ear, but her eyes were watering, her ears
flattened and nostrils wide as if she were facing into some powerful
wind. "Forgiven," said Pyanfar. The lift let them out, and
Hilfy started to run up the corridor toward the bridge, but Pyanfar
stalked along at a more deliberate pace and Hilfy paused and matched
her stride, walked with her through the archway into the curved-deck
main operations center. Pyanfar sat down in her
cushion in the center of a bank of vid screens and started turning on
systems. Station was squalling stsho language protests, objections,
outrage. "Get on that," Pyanfar said to her niece without
missing a beat in switch-flicking. "Tell station we're cutting
loose and they'll have to cope with it." A delay. Hilfy relayed the
message in limping stsho, ignoring the mechanical translator in her
haste. "They complain you killed someone." "Good." The
grapples clanged loose and a telltale said they had retracted all the
way. "Tell them we rejoice to have eliminated a kif who started
firing without provocation, endangering bystanders and property on
the dock." She fired the undocking repulse and they were loose,
sudden loss of g and reacquisition in another direction . . . fired
the secondaries which sent The Pride out of plane with station, a
redirection of up and down. Ship's g started up, a slow tug against
the thrust aft. "Station is mightily
upset," Hilfy reported. "They demand to talk to you, aunt;
they threaten not to let us dock at stsho -- " "Never mind the
stsho." Pyanfar flicked from image to image on scan. She spotted
another ship loose, in about the right location for Hinukku. Abruptly
the scan acquired all kinds of flitter on it, chaff more than likely,
as Hinukku screened itself to do something. "Gods rot them."
She reached madly for controls and got The Pride reoriented gently
enough to save the bones of those aboard who might not yet be secured
for maneuvers . . . warning enough for those below to dive for
security. "If they fire on us they'll take out half the station.
Gods!" She hit general com. "Brace; we're backing hard." This time things came
loose. A notebook sailed across the section and landed somewhere
forward, missing controls. Hilfy spat and curses came back from com.
The Pride was not made for such moves. Nor for the next, which
hammered against that backward momentum and, nose dipped, shot them
nadir of station (the notebook flew back to its origins) and braked,
another career of fluttering pages. "Motherless
bastards," Pyanfar said. She punched controls, linked turret to
scan. It would swivel to any sighting, anything massive. "Now
let them put their nose down here." Her joints were sore. Alarms
were ringing and lights were flashing on the maintenance board, cargo
having broken loose. She ran her tongue over the points of her teeth
and wrinkled her nose for breath, worrying what quadrant of the scan
to watch. She put The Pride into a slow axis rotation, gambling that
the kif would not come underside of station in so obvious a place as
the one in line with last-known-position. "Watch scan," she
warned Hilfy, diverting herself to monitor the op board half a
heartbeat, to see all the telltales what they ought to be. "Haral,
get up here." "Aunt!" Hilfy
said. Pyanfar swung her head about again. A little dust had appeared
on the screen, some of the chaff spinning their way from above. She
had the scanlinked fire control set looser than that and the armament
did not react. The lift back down the corridor crashed and hummed in
operation. Haral had not acknowledged, but she was coming. "We
fire on anything that shows solid," Pyanfar said. "Keep
watching that chaff cloud, niece. And mind, it could be outright
diversion. I don't trust anything." "Yes," Hilfy
said calmly enough. And then: "Look out!" "Chaff," Pyanfar
identified the flutter, her heart frozen by the yell. "Be
specific to quadrant: number's enough." Running feet in the
corridor. Haral was with them. Hilfy started to yield her place at
scan; Haral slid into the third seat, adjusted the restraints. "Didn't plan to do so
much moving," Pyanfar said, never taking the focus of her eyes
from scan. "Anyone hurt?" "No," said
Haral. "Everything's secure." "They're thinking it
over up there," Pyanfar said. "Aunt! 4/2!" Turret was swiveling. Eye
tracked to the number four screen. Energy washed over station's rim:
more chaff followed, larger debris. "Captain, they hit
station." Haral's voice was incredulous. "They fired." "Handur's Voyager."
Pyanfar had the origin mapped on the station torus and made the
connection. "O gods." She hit repulse and sent them
hurtling to station core shadow, tilted their nose with a second
burst and cut in main thrust, shooting them nadir of station, nose
for infinity. Pyanfar reached and uncapped a red switch, hit it, and
The Pride rocked with explosion. "What was that?"
Hilfy's voice. "Are we hit?" "I just dumped our
holds." Pyanfar sucked air, an expansion of her nostrils. Her
claws flexed out and in on the togglegrip. G was hauling at them
badly. The Pride of Chanur was in full rout, having just altered
their mass/drive ratio, stripped for running. "Haral, get us a
course." "Working," Haral
said. Numbers started coming up on the comp screen at Pyanfar's left. "Going to have to
find us a quiet spot." "Urtur's just within
singlejump range," Haral said, "stripped as we are. Maybe." "Has to be."
Beyond Meetpoint in the other direction was stsho space, with a great
scarcity of jump points to help them along, those masses by which The
Pride or any other jumpship steered; and on other sides were kif
regions; and knnn; and unexplored regions, uncharted, without jump
coordinates. Jump blind into those and they would never come back
again . . . anywhere known. She livened another board,
bringing up jump-graphs. Urtur. That was the way they had come in,
two jumps and loaded -- a very large system where mahendo'sat did a
little mining, a little manufacture, and licensed others. They might
make that distance in one jump now; kif were not following . . . yet.
Did not have to follow. They could figure possible destinations by
dumped mass and the logic of the situation. O my brother, she
thought, wondering how she would face Kohan. He would be affected by
this disgrace, this outrage of lost cargo, of flight while a hani
ship perished stationbound and helpless. Kohan Chanur might be broken
by it; it might tempt young males to challenge him. And if there were
enough challenges, and often enough. . . . No. Not that kind of end
for Chanur. There was no going home with that kind of news. Not until
kif paid, until The Pride got things to rights again. "Mark fifteen to jump
point," Haral said. "Captain, they'll trace us, no
question." "No question,"
she said. Beyond Haral's scarred face she caught sight of Hilfy's,
unmarred and scant-bearded -- frightened and trying not to show it.
Pyanfar opened allship: "Rig for jump." The alarm started, a slow
wailing through the ship. The Pride leapt forward by her generation
pulses, borrowed velocity at the interface, several wrenching
flickers, whipped into the between. Pyanfar dug her claws in, decades
accustomed to this, did that mental wrench which told lies to the
inner ears, and kept her balance. Come on, she willed the ship, as if
intent alone could take it that critical distance farther.
III The Pride came in,
sluggish, nightmare arrival, pulsed out and in again, a flickering of
jump-distorted instruments which showed them far out on the Urtur
range, not close enough to pick up more than an indication of a
stellar mass. Near miss. They had
stretched it as far as it could be stretched. Pyanfar struggled to
move in her cushion, fighting to aim the fingers of her hand, to shut
down all scan, running lights, the weak locational and ID
transmission, every emission from the ship, forgetting nothing in the
mental confusion which went with emergence. Then she started the
sequence to bleed off their velocity, an uncomfortable ride, even as
nightmare-slow as they were moving on their emergence. She kept her
mind focused, trying not to let her thoughts stray to the horror at
the back of it, how fine they had cut it. Hilfy threw up, not an
uncommon reaction to the shift. It did not help Pyanfar's own
stomach. "We're dumping down
to systemic drift velocity," Pyanfar said on allship. "Possibly
the kif stayed to sort through what we jettisoned, but they'll be
here in short order. Or they're already here . . . with likely more
kif here to help them. I'll be very surprised otherwise. We've shut
down all transmission, all scan output. No use of the main engines
either. Everyone still all right down there?" There was prolonged delay
in response. "Looks to be," Tirun's voice came back from
lowerdeck op, which had lost most of what it was primarily designed
to monitor when the holds blew. "Chur and Geran are starting a
check by remote, but it looks like it was a clean separation when we
blew it out. All working systems are clean." The velocity dump went on.
Hilfy moved about, cleaning up in shame. Haral stayed her post.
Pyanfar occupied herself with feverish calculations and sorted and
calculated on that one arrival image they had gotten before scan shut
down, and on what they had on passive recept. She did a delicate
attitude adjustment, trimmed up relative to the flow they were trying
to enter, to present the least surface and the least delicate portion
of them to hazard -- put The Pride into synch with the general
rotation of the system, one with the debris and the rock and gas
which made Urtur, spread out over the orbits of ten planets and
fifty-seven major moons and uncounted planetoids and smaller hazards,
one of the more difficult systems for the rapid passage of any ship
into its central plane. The Pride was picking up decayed signal from
a mahendo'sat installation farther in ... at least that station
should be the origin of it, chatter meaningless not only in the
distance but in elapsed time since its sending. Some might be scatter
from ships operating in the system, traders, countless miners in
ships of all sizes from the great orecarriers down to singleseat
skimmers. In due course they themselves ought to announce presence
and identity, but she had no intention of doing so. There was an
excellent chance that their arrival had been far beyond the capacity
of the longest scan from outsystem relay, and she saw no profit in
bringing the mahendo'sat of Urtur in on a private quarrel with the
kif. The kif could have arrived days ago, bypassing them in the
between, which could happen with a more powerful ship -- system
chatter might reveal that. She kept listening to it with one ear,
finished up the dump, pulling them finally into trim, counting to
herself and hoping her position was what she thought it was. The Pride drifted then,
still maintaining rotation for g, but nothing else of movement. She
kept counting. Debris suddenly rang off the unshielded hull, distant
battering, a few crashes and squeals of larger objects. Target dead
on: she had it, a mob of rocks a little off their velocity, cold mass
swarming about them, a screen between them and the kif s possible
arrival. She feathered directional jets and trimmed up again. The
battering diminished to an occasional patter of dust. Hilfy, standing
by the com console counter, looked about her as if she could expect
to see the impacts with all their sensor eyes dark; met Pyanfar's
face and looked then at Haral, who grimly sat her post and kept
trying to plot their position; and Hilfy composed her own face,
managed not to flinch when another rock shrilled down the
forward-thrusting bow. Pyanfar heaved her aching
body out of the cushion, staggered in walking around the dividing
console to put her hand on the back of Haral's cushion. "Put the
pagers in link," she told Haral. "Keep it channel one and
see that someone's always on it. Tie into lowerdeck op: they'll be
working down there a while yet. The kif will show, never doubt it. So
we lie still, rest up. We receive signal; we don't send; we don't
maneuver. We don't do anything now but drift." "Aye." Haral
started making the links, shunting over some of com function, an
operation which Hilfy should have done. Her broad, scarred face was
without disturbance at this insanity. Haral knew the game; they had
done it a time or two, this prolonged dark silence, waiting out a kif
or an unknown -- but not in Urtur's debris-cluttered field, not
where other ships were likely and collision was possible. Haral knew.
It was Hilfy for whom she offered instructions. Pyanfar took her own pager
from the wall by the exit and went back to give one to Hilfy, who was
leaning against the counter, nostrils slitted and ears laid back.
Pyanfar clapped her on the shoulder and thrust the pager into her
hand. "Out. Go. Everything's about to go under automatic here,
and there's nothing you can do." She passed by Hilfy and headed
out her own way down the corridor outside, with a foul headache, a
worry in her gut, and an obsessive desire for a bath.
Her quarters, left
unsecured, were not as bad as they might have been. The spring covers
had held on the round bed, and the only casualty was a pile of charts
now randomized. She gritted her teeth against the throbbing in her
skull and picked them up, straightened the edges and slapped the
unsorted pile back onto the desk, then stripped off her bloody
clothes, brushed dried blood from her fur and a cloud of shed fur,
too. She always shed in jump . . . sheer fright. Her muscles were
tight. She flexed her cramped shoulders and an arm strained from
fighting g, a stitch all the way into her rib muscles; and she picked
up the pager again and took it with her into the bath, listening to
it, which had nothing but static -- set it on the bathroom counter
before getting into the shower cabinet. The shower was pure
delight, warm and soothing. She lifted her face to it, lowered ears,
shut nostrils and squinched her eyes shut, letting the stream from
the jet comb her mane and beard into order, stepped back and wiped
her eyes clear, turned her back and let the spray massage the pain
out of her tired shoulders. The pager went off,
emergency beep. She spat a curse and flung the shower door open,
skidded on the floor and ran out of the bath and out of her quarters
naked and dripping as she was. She met Haral and Hilfy on their
separate ways back and beat them to the central console. A ship was out there all
right, some ways distant, where no ship had been previously -- an
arrival out of jump. Pyanfar leaned over the board, wiped a bit of
water off the screen and wiped it down her chest, holding her beard
and trying to avoid dripping. The newcomer was closer to Urtur than
they, a good distance inward and zenith -- had actually arrived a
while ago: passive recept picked it up from its inherent noise. "Better part of an
hour backtime," Haral calculated. "I can fine it down." 'Do that." They watched it a while,
while Pyanfar dripped a cold puddle on the decking and the counter.
"Going inward," she pronounced finally on the figures Hilfy
passed her, checked against current reception. "If that's the
kif, they overjumped us and now they've got a bit of hunting to do.
We have a wave just getting to them, but it's got nothing for them,
nothing they're going to know from all the rest of the junk out here.
Good." She recalled her condition and straightened from bending
over the board. "Mop that," she said to Hilfy, who was
juniormost. She strode off, pricklish in her dignity.
"Captain,"
Haral's voice came over the pager, and Pyanfar crossed the cabin in
two strides to reach the com by her bedside . . . punched it with a
forefinger, comb clenched in the same hand. "Receiving you." "Got some chatter
that doesn't sound good," Haral said. "I think there are
kif here, all right. What came into the system a while ago isn't
certain, but it could be mahendo'sat; and I'm getting kif voices and
kif signal out of system center. "Doesn't surprise me.
Pity the mahe who dropped into this pond, if that's what's happened.
But it might cover any noise we made in entry, if that's what it is." "Might do,"
Haral said. "Gods, captain, no telling how many kif there may
have been at Urtur to start with. They're going to swarm all over the
mahendo'sat." "Gods know how much
kif trouble they've already had here. That bunch from Meetpoint could
have gotten as much as five, six days' jump on us. Forget it. Let it
rest. Our business is our own business." "Aye," Haral
said reluctantly. "Shut it down, Haral.
Until they come after us, we're snug." "Aye, captain." The contact broke off.
Pyanfar drew a long breath and let it go, stood in front of the unit
and after a moment punched in the image they could get, from the
telescope in the observation dome. Urtur was a glorious sight ... at
a distance, a saucer of milky light. A shadow passed the image, a bit
of rock, doubtless, part of the swarm with which they traveled. She
shut it down again. They rolled along blind, getting a tap on the
hull now and again from debris, muted this far into The Pride's core,
as they played their part as a mote in Urtur's vast lens. This
silence was an old trick. It worked . . . sometimes. She continued her combing,
and finally, pelt dried, mane and beard combed and silky again in
their ringlets, changed to her third-best trousers, of black silk,
with green and gold cuffing and belt, a round-the-hips dangle of real
gold chains. She changed her pearl earring for an emerald, inspected
her claws and trimmed a roughness. A tip had broken. Hard-skinned,
the kif. But she had got him, that bastard on the dock. That was at
least some consolation for the lost cargo and Tirun's misery. For
hani lives -- that was yet to collect. She strolled out again,
into controls, where Hilfy was standing lone watch. They had far more
room when they were under rotation, with the ship's g making the
crew's private quarters and a great deal of storage accessible, as
well as that large forward ell of the control area itself which was
out of reach during dock. Some of the crew ought to be offshift now,
eating, sleeping: they arranged such details among themselves when
things were tight, knowing best when they needed rest and balancing
the ship's needs against their own. Hilfy had a bruised look when she
turned to face Pyanfar as she came up behind her in the semishadow of
the bridge, amid dead screens and virtually lightless panels. She
stood there as if there was something she could hope to do, ears
pricked up and eyes wide-irised with her general distress. "Haral left you on
watch, imp?" "Haral said she was
going below." "I thought I
dismissed you." "I thought it
wouldn't hurt to be here. I can't rest." "Can't rest is a
cheat on the ship. Can't rest is something you learn to remedy, imp.
It's going to be too long a wait to wear ourselves to rags up here.
Nothing we can do." "Com keeps coming in.
It's them -- it's the same kif. They're asking the mahendo'sat ships
where we are and they're making threats. They call us thieves." Pyanfar spat dryly and
chuckled. "What tender honor. What are the mahendo'sat doing
about it?" "Nothing. It is a
mahendo'sat station, after all; there are other ships ... all over
the place -- there's help for them, isn't there? I'd think they'd do
something, not just let the kif do what they please." "There may be a lot
of kif, too." Pyanfar leaned forward and checked the boards
herself, the little data the computer got off passive recept. A rock
hit them, a slow scream down the metal; a screen flickered to static
and corrected itself, an impact on one of the antennae. "I won't
tell you, imp, just how close we came to losing our referents in that
jump. If that kif ship did get here ahead of us, it's considerably
more powerful than we are. All power and precious little cargo room.
That tell you anything?" "It's not a
freighter." "Kif runner. Got a
few false tanks strapped on, all shell and no mass to speak of,
masking what she is. You understand? Ships like that do the kill; the
carrioneaters come after, real freighters, that suck up the cargoes
and do the dockside trading when they do get to some port. That's
what we're likely up against. A runner. A hunter ship. They
overestimated our capacity . . . overjumped us, more than likely, and
incoming traffic may have been good enough to confuse the issue
further. If that's the case we've just used up all the luck we're
entitled to." "Are we just going to
sit here?" Hilfy asked. "Ship after ship is going to come
into this system not knowing what they're running into ... all those
ships from Meetpoint that don't go the stsho route -- " "Imp, we're blind at
the moment. We've dumped velocity . . . and maybe some of those
hunting us haven't; and maybe some are yet to come. You know what
kind of situation that puts us in. Sitting target." "If they all stay to
centerward," Hilfy suggested cautiously, "we could just
jump out again ... be gone before they could catch us, take the
pressure off these mahe before someone else gets hurt. Maybe we could
get away with it again at the next jumppoint, get to Kirdu . . .
after Urtur, couldn't we maybe make Kirdu in two jumps? Get out of
here. After this place, there are other choices. Aren't there?" Pyanfar stared at her.
"Been doing some research, have you?" "I looked." "Huh." It was a
sensible idea, and one she had had even before the jump; but there
were loose pieces in this business. Moves not yet calculated. It
remained to measure how upset the kif were. And why. "Possible."
She jabbed a finger at Hilfy. "First we take account of
ourselves. We go down, shall we, and see what we have left of cargo." "I thought we dumped
it all." "Oh, not what the kif
want, not that, niece." She leaned over the console, checked the
pager link. "I think we can leave it a while. Come along. It's
all being recorded, all the com and scan up here. We'll check it.
Can't live up here." She set her hand on Hilfy's shoulder. "We
go ask some questions, that's what."
Their uninvited passenger
had settled after jump -- cocooned in blankets and sedated for the
trip, now let go again, to huddle in that heap of blankets in the
corner of the washroom. It had curled up in a knot and thrown one of
the blankets over its head, showing nothing but the motions of its
breathing to prove it was under there. "The ankle restraint
is back on it," Chur said as they watched it from the doorway.
"It's been docile all along ... but let me call Geran and we'll
be sure of it." Chur was smallest of the crew, smaller than
Geran her sister, who was herself of no great stature -- with a thin
beard and mane and a yellowish tint to her fur: delicate, one might
say, who did not know Chur. "There are three of
us," Pyanfar said, "already. Let's see how it reacts."
She walked into the washroom and came near that heap of breathing
blankets. Coughed. There was movement in the blankets, the lifting of
a corner, a furtive look of a pale eye from beneath them. Pyanfar
beckoned. It stopped moving. "It quite well
understands me," she said. "I think, Chur, you're going to
have to get Geran. We may have to fetch it out and I don't want to
hurt it." Chur left. Hilfy remained.
The blankets stirred again, and the creature made a faltering effort
to get its back into the angle of the corner made by the shower stall
and the laundry. "It's just too weak,"
Hilfy said. "Aunt, it's just too weak to fight." "I'll stand here,"
Pyanfar proposed. "There's a mahendo'sat symbol translator and
some manuals and modules -- Haral said she put it in the lowerdeck
op; I want the elementary book. Here. Gods forbid someone put it into
cargo." Hilfy hesitated, cast a
look at the Outsider, then scurried off in haste. "So," Pyanfar
said. She dropped to her haunches as she had before, put out a
forefinger and traced numbers from one to eight on the flooring.
Looked up from time to time and looked at the creature, who watched
her. It reached out of its nest of blankets and made tentative
movements of writing on the floor, drew back the arm and watched what
she was doing until she stopped at sixteen. It tucked the blankets
more closely about itself and stared, from bleak, blue eyes. Washed,
it looked better. The mane and beard were even beautiful, silken,
pollen-gold. But the naked arm outthrust from the blankets bore ugly
bruises of fingered grips. There had been a lot of bruises under the
dirt, she reckoned. It had a reason for its attitude. It was not
docile now, just weak. It had drawn another line, staked out its
corner. The blue eyes held a peculiar expression, analysis, perhaps,
some thought proceeding at length. She stood up, hearing Chur
and Geran coming, their voices in the corridor -- turned and motioned
them to wait a moment when they arrived. She watched the Outsider's
pale eyes take account of the reinforcements. And Hilfy came back
with the manual. "It was in the -- " Hilfy broke off, in
the general stillness of the place. "Give it here,"
Pyanfar said, holding out her hand without looking away from the
Outsider. Hilfy gave it. Pyanfar
opened the book, turned the pages toward the Outsider, whose eyes
flickered with bewilderment. She bent, discarding her dignity a
moment in the seriousness of the matter, and pushed the manual across
the tiles to the area the creature could reach. It ignored the open
book. Another ploy failed. Pyanfar sat still a moment, arms on her
knees, then stood up and brushed her silk breeches into order. "I
trust the symbol translator made it intact." "It's fine,"
Hilfy said. "So let's try that.
Can you set it up?" "I learned on one." "Do it," Pyanfar
said; and motioned to Geran and Chur. "Get it on its feet. Be
gentle with it." Hilfy hurried off. Geran
and Chur moved in carefully and Pyanfar stepped out of the way,
thinking it might turn violent, but it did not. It stood up docilely
as they patted it and assisted it to its feet. It was naked, and he
was a reasonable guess, Pyanfar concluded, watching it make a snatch
after the blankets about its feet, while Chur carefully unlocked the
chain they had padded about its ankle, Geran holding onto its right
arm. Pyanfar frowned, disturbed to be having a male on the ship, with
all the thoughts that stirred up. Chur and Geran were being
uncommonly courteous with it, and that was already a hazard. "Look sharp,"
Pyanfar said. "Take it to the op room and mind what you're
doing." She stooped and gathered up the symbol book herself as
they led it out toward the door. The Outsider balked of a
sudden in the doorway, and Chur and Geran patted its hairless
shoulders and let it think about it a long moment, which seemed the
right tack to take. It stood a very long moment, looked either way
down the corridor, seemed frozen, but then at a new urging -- "Come
on," Geran said in the softest possible voice and tugged very
slightly -- the Outsider decided to cooperate and let itself be led
into the hall and on toward operations. Pyanfar followed with the
book under her arm, scowling for the cost the Outsider had already
been to them, and with the despondent feeling that she might yet be
wrong in every assumption she had made. They had paid far too much
for that. And then what? Give it
back to the kif after all, and shrug and pretend it had been nothing?
The Outsider balked more
than once in being moved, looked about it at such intervals as if
things were moving too fast for it and it had to get its bearings.
Chur and Geran let it stop when it would, never hurrying it, then
coaxed it gently. It walked for them -- perhaps, Pyanfar thought
sourly, biding its time, testing their reflexes, memorizing the
corridors, if it had the wit to do so. They brought it into the
op room, in front of all the boards and the glowing lights, and it
balked again, hard-breathing, looking about. Now, Pyanfar thought,
they might have trouble; but no, it let itself be moved again and let
itself be put into one of the cushions at the dead cargo-monitor
console, near the counter where Hilfy worked over the translator,
running a series of figures over the screen. The Outsider slumped
when seated, dazed-looking and sweating profusely, tucked in its
blanket which it clutched about itself. Pyanfar walked up to the arm
of the cushion; its head came up instantly at her presence and the
wariness came back into its eyes. More than wariness. Fear. It
remembered who had hurt it. It knew them as individuals, past a
clothing change. That at least. "Hai," Pyanfar
said in her best friend-to-outsiders manner, patted its hairless,
sweating shoulder, swept Hilfy aside in her approach to the
translator, a cheap, replaceable stickered keyboard unit linked by
cable into one of their none so cheap scanners. She pushed wipe,
clearing Hilfy's figures, then the Bipedal Sentient button, with a
stick figure of a long-limbed being spread-eagled on it. The same
figure appeared on the screen. She pushed the next which showed a
hani in photographic image, and indicated herself. It understood. Its eyes
were bright with anxiety. It clutched its blanket tighter and made a
faltering attempt to get its feet back on the floor and to stand,
reaching toward the machine. "Let it loose," Pyanfar said,
and Chur helped it up. It ignored them all, leaned on the counter and
poised a trembling hand over the keyboard. The whole arm shook. It
punched a button. Ship. It looked up, its
eyes seeking understanding. Pyanfar carefully took its
alien hand, oh, so carefully, but it allowed the touch. She extended
its forefinger and guided it to the wipe button, back to the ship
button again. It freed its hand and searched, the hand shaking
violently as it passed above the keys. Figure Running, it keyed.
Ship. Figure Running. Ship again. Hani. Wipe. It looked about at her. "Yes," she said,
recognizing the statement. Motioned for it to do more. It turned again, made
another search of the keys. Figure Supine, it stated. It found the
pictorial for kif. That long-snouted gray face lit the screen beside
the Figure Supine. "Kif," Pyanfar
said. It understood. That was
very clear. "Kif," it echoed. It had a voice full of
vibrant sounds, like purring. It was strange to hear it articulate a
familiar word . . . hard to pick that word out when the tongue
managed neither the kif click nor the hani cough. And the look in its
eyes now was more than apprehensive. Wild. Pyanfar put her claws out
and demonstratively rested her hand over the image. Pushed wipe. She
put the hani symbol back on, punched in voice-record; hani, the audio
proclaimed, in hani mode. She picked Up the cheap mike and spoke for
the machine's study-tape, with the machine recording her voice.
"Hani." She called up another image. "Stand." A
third. "Walk." It took a little
repetition, but the Outsider began to involve itself in the process
and not in its trembling hysteria over the kif image. It started with
the first button . . . worked at the system, despite its physical
weakness, recorded its own identification for all the simple symbols
on the first row, soberly, with no joy in its discovery, but not
sluggishly either. It began to go faster and faster, jabbed keys,
spoke, one after the other, madly rapid, as if it were proving
something. There were seventy-six keys on that unit and it ran
through the lot, although toward the end its hand was hardly
controllable. Then it stopped and turned
that same sullen look on them and reached for the seat it had left.
It barely made it, sank down in the cushion and wrapped its blanket
up about its shoulders, pale and sweating. "It's gone its
limit," Pyanfar said. "Get it some water." Chur brought it from the
dispenser. The Outsider accepted it one-handed, sniffed the paper
cup, then drained it. It gave the empty cup back, pointed at itself,
at the machine on the counter, looked at Pyanfar, correctly assessing
who was in charge. It wanted, Pyanfar read the gestures, to continue. "Hilfy," Pyanfar
said, "the manual, on the counter. Give it here." Hilfy handed it over.
Pyanfar searched through the opening pages for the precise symbols of
the module in the machine at present. "How many of those modules
do we have?" "Ten. Two manuals." "That ought to carry
us into abstracts. Good for Haral." She set the opened book into
the Outsider's lap and pointed at the symbols it had just done,
showed it how far the section went. Now it made the connection. It
gathered the book against itself with both arms, intent on keeping
it. "Yes.' Pyanfar said, and nodded confirmation. Maybe nodding
was a gesture they shared; it nodded in return, never looking happy,
but there was less distress in its look. It clutched its book the
tighter. Pyanfar looked at Hilfy,
at Geran and Chur, whose expressions were guarded. They well knew now
what level of sentient they had aboard. How much they guessed of
their difficulties with the kif was another matter: a lot, she
reckoned -- they picked up things out of the air, assembled them
themselves without having to ask. "A passenger compartment,"
she said. "I think it might like clothes. Food and drink. Its
book. Clean bedding and a bed to sleep in. Civilized facilities. That
doesn't mean you shouldn't be careful with it. Let's move it, shall
we, and let it rest." It looked from Chur to
Geran as the two closed in, grew distressed when Chur took its arm to
get it on its feet. It pointed back at the machine . . . wanted that,
its chance to communicate. Perhaps there was more it planned to say,
in the symbols. Surely it expected to go back to the washroom corner.
Pyanfar reached and touched its shoulder from the other side, touched
the book it held and pressed its hand the tighter against it,
indicating it should keep the book, the best promise she could think
of that might tell it they were not done with talking. It calmed
itself, at least, let itself be drawn to its feet and, once steadied,
led out. Pyanfar looked at the
machine on the counter, walked over and turned it off. Hilfy was
still standing there. "Move the whole rig," Pyanfar said.
"We'll risk the equipment." She unplugged the keyboard
module, which was no burden at all, but awkward. "Bring the
screen." "Aunt," said
Hilfy, "what are we going to do with him?" "That depends on what
the kif had in mind to do with him. But we can hardly ask them, can
we?" She followed after the Outsider and Chur and Geran, down
the side corridor to one of the three rooms they kept for The
Pride's occasional paying passengers, up the curve into the area of
the crew's private quarters. They were nicely appointed cabins. The
one Chur and Geran had selected was in fresh greens with woven grass
for the walls and with the bed and chairs in pale lime complement.
Pyanfar counted the damage possible and winced, but they had suffered
far worse in the cause than torn upholstery. And the Outsider seemed to
recognize a major change in its fortunes. It stood in the center of
the room clutching its book and its blanket and staring about with a
less sullen expression than before . . . seemed rather dazed by it
all, if its narrow features were at all readable. "Better show
it the sanitary facilities first," Pyanfar said. "I hope it
understands." Chur took it by the arm
and drew it into the bath, carefully. Hilfy brought the screen in and
Pyanfar added the module as she set it on the counter and plugged it
into the auxiliary com/ comp receptacle. From the bath there came
briefly the sound of the shower working, then the toilet cycling.
Chur brought the Outsider back into the main room, both looking
embarrassed. Then the Outsider saw the translator hookup sitting on
the counter, and its eyes flickered with interest. Not joy. There was never
that. It said something. Two
distinct words. For a moment it sounded as if it were speaking its
own language. And then it sounded vaguely kif. Pyanfar's ears pricked
up ad she drew in a breath. "Say again," she urged it in
kif, and made an encouraging motion toward her ear, standard dockside
handsign. "Kif. . . companion?" "No." She drew a
deeper breath. "Bastard! You do understand." And again in
kif: "Who are you? What kind are you?" It shook its head, seeming
helpless. Evidently who was not part of its repertoire. Pyanfar
considered the anxious Outsider thoughtfully, reached and set her
hand on Chur's convenient shoulder. "This is Chur," she
said in kif. And in hani: "You do me a great favor, cousin: you
sit with this Outsider on your watch. You keep him going on those
identifications, change modules the minute you've got one fully
identified, the audio track filled. Keep him at it while he will but
don't force him. You know how to work it?" "Yes," Chur
said. "You be careful. No
knowing what it's thinking, what it's been through, and I don't put
deviousness beyond its reach either. I want it communicative; don't
be rough with it, don't frighten it. But don't put yourself in danger
either. -- Geran, you stay outside, do your operations monitor by
pager so long as Chur's inside, hear?" Geran's ears -- the right
one was notched, marring what was otherwise a considerable beauty --
flicked in distress, a winking of gold rings on the left. "Clearly
understood," she said. "Hilfy." Pyanfar
motioned to her niece and started out the door. The Outsider started
toward them, but Chur's outflung arm prevented it and it stopped, not
willing to quarrel. Chur spoke to it quickly, gingerly touched its
bare shoulder. It looked frightened, for the first time outright
frightened. "I think it wants
you, aunt," Hilfy observed. Pyanfar laid her ears
back, abhorring the thought of fending off a grab at her person,
walked out with Hilfy unhurried all the same. She looked back from
the doorway. "Be careful of it," she told Chur and Geran
again. "Ten times it may be gentle and agreeable . . . and go
for your throat on the eleventh." She walked off, the skin
of her shoulders twitching with distaste. Hilfy trailed her, but
Pyanfar jammed her hands into the back of her waistband and took no
notice of her niece until they had gotten to the lift. Hilfy pressed
the button to open the door and they got in. Pressed central; it
brought them up and still without a word Pyanfar walked out into the
bridgeward corridor. "Aunt," Hilfy
said. Pyanfar looked back. "What shall we do
with it?" "I'm sure I don't
know," Pyanfar said tartly. Her ears were still back. She
purposely put on a better face. "Not your fault, niece. This one
is my own making." "I'd take some of the
slack; I'd help, if I knew what to do. With the cargo gone -- " Pyanfar frowned and the
ears went down again. You want to relieve me of worry? she thought.
Then don't do anything stupid. But there was that face, young and
proud and wanting to do well. Most that Hilfy knew how to do on the
ship had gone when cargo blew and scan shut down. "Youngster,
I've gotten into a larger game than I planned, and there's no going
home until we've gotten it straightened out. How we do that is
another question, because the kif know our name. Have you got an idea
you've been sitting on?" "No, aunt -- being
ignorant about too much." Pyanfar nodded. "So
with myself, niece. Let it be a lesson to you. My situation
precisely, when I took the Outsider in, instead of handing it right
back to the kif." "We couldn't have
given him to them." "No,' Pyanfar agreed
heavily. "But it would certainly have been more convenient."
She shook her head. "Go rest whelp, and this time I mean it. You
were sick during jump; you'll be lagging when I do need you. And need
you I will." She walked on, into the bridge, past the archway.
Hilfy did not follow. Pyanfar sat down at her place, among all the
dead instruments, listened to the sometime whisper of larger dust
over the hull, called up all the record which had flowed in while she
was gone, listening to that with one ear and the current comflow with
the other. Bad news. A second arrival
in the system . . . more than one ship. It might be kif, might be
someone else from the disaster at Meetpoint. In either case it was
bad. The ones already here were on the hunt beyond question -- kif
were upset enough to have dumped cargo to get here from Meetpoint: no
other ships had cause to hunt The Pride, or to call them thief. They
were the same kif, beyond doubt, upset enough to have banded together
in a hunt. Bad news all the way. Urtur Station was into the
comflow now . . . bluster, warning the kif of severe penalties and
fines. That was very old chatter, from the beginning of the trouble,
a wavefront just now reaching them. Threats from the kif -- those
were more current. The mahendo'sat ship . . . harassed, made its way
stationward. The kif turned their attention to the new arrivals, to
other things. They would begin to figure soon that the freighters
last arrived had jumped behind The Pride. That The Pride had to have
tricked them and gone elsewhere into stsho territories, or had to be
here . . . doing precisely what they were doing; and very probably a
nervous kif would play the surmise he had already staked his
reputation on. They would start hunting shadows once they reached
that conclusion, having questioned a few frightened mahe. They would
fan out, prowl the system, stop miner ships, ask close questions,
probably commit small piracy at the same time, not to waste an
opportunity. The station could do nothing -- a larger one might, but
not Urtur, which was mostly manufacturing and scarcely defended. No
mahendo'sat ship would be willing to be stopped -- but there was no
hope for them of outrunning that hyped kif ship, no chance at least
which an ordinary mahendo'sat captain was equipped to take. And there was no chance
that one of those ships incoming from Meetpoint would turn out to be
hani, and relieve them all of that weight of guilt. Handur's Voyager
was gone, beyond hope and help. Not even proximity to Meetpoint was
likely to have saved anyone in that attack. The kif were nothing if
not thorough: they practiced bloodfeud themselves, and left no
survivors. Kif -- had somehow missed
killing one another off in their rise off their homeworld and into
space. They had done it, hani had always suspected, in mutual
distrust; in outright hatred. They had contested themselves into
space, and hunted each other through it until they found easier
pickings. Not The Pride, she swore,
and not Pyanfar Chanur. That kif who was in
command out there -- she was certain beyond question that it was
Akukkakk of Hinukku, who had come ahead to stake out Urtur to be
waiting for them -- once that kif knew they had gotten through, he
would be checking all his backtime records, sniffing through
everything hoping to catch some missed trace of The Pride's arrival.
They had left very little of a wavefront ghost to detect; but there
might be something, some small missed flicker. Running -- now -- had its
hazards. As long as some of the kif shuttled the system at relatively
high velocity, those ships could run down on them while they were
trying to build theirs back from virtual dead stop. Their chances of
breaking cover and running depended on the position of the kif ships,
whether they had that critical time they might need to get their
referent and to come up to position to jump. Blind as they had made
themselves, the only way to find out where those ships were was to
try something; and the only way to find out how many there were, was
to keep an ear to the kif chatter and see if they could pick out
individual ships. This Akukkakk would not
likely be so careless. It was certain enough they were not outputting
ID signal, which itself brought protests from the station; no ID
signal and no locational signal from any of them. Only from miners
and legitimate residents -- if those signals were what they ought to
be. So, so, so. They were in a
bottle, and it was too much to hope that the kif would not ultimately
coerce mahendo'sat help in the hunt for them. Station and miners
could be intimidated as the kif put the pressure on. What was more,
hani ships came and went at Urtur, and those ships would be
vulnerable to the kif, unsuspecting of atrocity such as the kif had
committed at Meetpoint. They would come into confrontation with the
kif having no idea of the stakes involved here. The kif might act
against them without warning, to draw The Pride out. Such tactics
were not hani practice; but she had been many years off Anuurn and
among outsiders, and she knew well enough how to think like a kif,
even if the process turned her stomach and bristled the hairs on her
nape. And then what do I do? she
wondered to herself. Do I come out meekly to die? Or let others? Her
crew had no more or less right to life than the crew of any other
hani ship which came straying into the trap. There were their lives
involved. There was Hilfy's. And thereby -- all of Chanur. Next time home, she vowed,
/ get that other gun battery moduled in, whatever it costs. Next time home. She frowned, cut off the
recording, which had come to the point at which she had come in. The
present transmissions were few and terse. Someone should be up here
directly and constantly monitoring the comflow and the rest: Hilfy
was right on that score. But they were not a fighting ship and they
had no personnel to spare for such. Six of them, with ordinary duties
and a prisoner to watch: there was course to plot, there were checks
to be run after their jump under stress, systems they had to be sure
of; and there was the chance that they might have to move, defend
themselves and run at any moment, which meant three crewmembers had
to be mentally and physically fit to take action at any instant,
whatever the hour. The automations which ran The Pride in her normal
workaday business had nothing to do with their situation now, systems
overstressed from a jump the ship was never designed to make,
makeshift security on an alien and possibly lunatic passenger. Gods.
She double-checked the pager operation, which was transmission
activated, advised the crew on watch that she was taking over monitor
for a while, to give them rest from the responsibility. "He's all right,"
Geran reported on the Outsider. "Resting awhile." It was good, she thought,
that someone could. She went finally to the
galley, up the curve; the reason of that large ell in the control
section -- no appetite in particular, but her limbs were weak from
hunger. She heated up a meal from the freezer, forced it down against
her stomach's earnest complaints, and tossed the dish into the
sterilizer. Then she walked back to her private quarters to try to
rest. She fretted too much for
sleep, paced the floor pointlessly, sorted the stack of charts into
order and sat down and plotted and replotted possible alternatives,
which she already guessed, against odds she already knew. At last she
shoved all that work aside and used the console by her bed to link in
on the Outsider's terminal, via main comp and access codes. It was
active again: she heard the Outsider's voice as well as saw the
symbols called up by the translator keys. He was using them one after
the other, and when she keyed in on com as well, she could pick up
Chur's voice in the room, quiet assistance -- sounds which might go
with pantomime. Occasionally there was a pairing of symbols the
machine did not do -- Chur's interference, perhaps, trying to get a
point across. Pyanfar cut off com and the translator reception,
stared at the dead screen. The chatter from Urtur system continued
from the pager at her belt, subdued and depressing in content.
Mahendo'sat ships were being advised by their own station not to run,
to submit to search if singled out by the kif, to hug station if they
were already there and hope for safety. A hani voice objected a
question. Hani! Pyanfar sprang from the
bedside, the walls of her cabin immaterial before her vision of that
station with a hani ship at dock; with kif able to move on it at
will. The hani spoke . . . had spoken long ago, in the timelag.
Whatever would happen . . . had long since taken place. Time as well
as space lay between The Pride and that hani ship and the kif, and
there was nothing she could do, blind, from a dead drift, to help it. "Gods!" she
spat, and hurled the desk chair forward on its track with a crash. It
was a Faha vessel in port; Faha's Starchaser, and that was a house
and a company allied to Chanur. Her brother Kohan's first wife was
Huran Faha. Hilfy's mother, for the gods' sakes! There were bonds,
compacts, agreements of alliance. . . . And Hilfy. The mahendo'sat at Urtur
Station urged the hani ship to keep calm. The mahe had, they avowed,
no intention of becoming involved in a kif quarrel, and they were not
going to let a rash hani involve them. The hani demanded
information; kif hunted a Chanur ship: the Faha had been listening
and fretting under restraint this long, and wanted answers -- knew
this was going out over com, as the station knew what the Faha were
doing, making vocal trouble, making sure information got out into the
dark where Chanur ears might pick it up. O gods, o gods. There was
an ally, doing the best for them that could be done at the moment . .
. and they were both helpless to come at the enemy. Pyanfar pulled the chair
out again, sat down, lost in listening for a while. There was no
further information. They had gotten that spurt on the station's
longrange or on Starchaser's . . . information like a beacon fired
off into outsystem, deliberately. If they had it figured The Pride
was here . . . then so did the kif. There were echoes,
repetitions of the message: com was sorting them out, transmissions
of differing degrees of clarity, and the hair prickled on Pyanfar's
neck, sudden, grateful realization: ships all over the system had
begun relaying that message, letting it off like multiple ripples in
still water, massive defiance of the kif -- and the kif had not
ordered silence ... on this timeline. They could not enforce such a
demand, at the present limits of their aggression at Urtur: but those
limits could change. The information was going out like a multiplied
shout . . . had gone out, long ago, and was still traveling.
She found Hilfy for once
where she was supposed to be, in her own quarters, asleep. She
hesitated when the sleepy voice answered the doorcom hail, no more
than hesitated. "Up," she said into the com. "I've
somewhat to tell you." Hilfy was quick to the
door. It whipped opened and Hilfy hung there, disheveled from bed and
grimacing in the full light of the corridor. She had not paused for
clothes. Pyanfar walked in past
her, waited while Hilfy brightened the interior lighting, and held up
a restraining hand, that the brightening need not be permanent or
full. It was a room Hilfy had made her own, a great deal of Chanur
style in this cabin, more than in her own quarters, mementoes affixed
to the walls, pictures of homeworld's mountains and the broad plains
of the Chanur holdings ... the Holding itself, gold stone, shaded
with vines. Pyanfar looked about her, and looked at Hilfy. "Briefly,"
Pyanfar said, "I have to tell you a thing; and there's nothing
can be done about it, I'll tell you that first. We've picked up
signal from a Faha ship docked at station. They're in the middle of
the kif, and they fired a message off for station that I think they
meant we should hear: noisy chatter. I think they know we're out here
and in what kind of trouble. But there's the kif between us, and
there's no way we can do much for each other. You understand?" Hilfy's eyes had stopped
flinching at the light. She stared, amber-rimed about the black, and
her ears flattened and pricked up again with effort. For a young
woman and roused naked out of sleep, she acquired a quiet dignity in
getting her wits collected. "Do you know which ship, aunt?" "Starchaser. That's
Lihan Faha in command." Hilfy nodded. The ears
flinched, ringless. Her face stayed composed. "They'll be in
danger. Like Voyager. And they won't know it. No one would expect
that kind of attack." "Lihan's no tyro,
imp, believe it. We don't play their hand; they don't interfere in
ours. Can't. Nothing we can do out here." "We could throw them
a warning and run." "I don't take that as
an option at the moment. We send it from distance and the kif will
have it before Starchaser has a chance. And public defiance,
involving Starchaser in our leaving -- the kif would be obliged to
react. Revenge is part of their mindset. You have to calculate that
into it. No. Starchaser's riding her own luck. I don't plan to push
it for her. So go back to bed, hear?" Hilfy stood a moment
without moving. Nodded after a moment, her dignity still about her. "Good," Pyanfar
said tightly, and walked out. She heard the door close after her, and
walked the upcurving corridor which led from Hilfy's quarters to her
own, across the main topside corridor and down a short distance. So she might have cost
Hilfy her sound sleep, and the meal she had eaten lay like lead at
her own stomach; but Faha involvement in the hazard was not something
for Hilfy to find out later, like a child, spared adult
unpleasantnesses. Hilfy's face stayed before her; the pager unit at
her hip kept up its static babble, dying echoes of the message,
occasional-spurts of closer transmission, but rarer and rarer. A
stsho ship had come into the system. The kif disdained to harass it;
it begged instructions of Urtur Station, anxious to scud in before
the storm. A lot of mahe in the
system might have the same idea, miners who had already reckoned it
time to head for port, getting themselves out of the way of the kif s
hunt. It was a vast system out
there. Most of the ships in it were incapable of jump, insystem
operators only. So far, everyone was keeping remarkably calm, even
the hani at the eye of that storm. Gods grant a great many
ships pulled inward . . . and afforded the kif a harder target if
they wanted to raid Station in search of one hani ship. That was one
hope. Lihan Faha of Starchaser was too old, too wary to rush out to
mismatched battle. Lihan would not expect stupidity of The Pride. The
Faha would expect them to fend for themselves and above all not touch
anything off prematurely. The Faha needed time: there was a chance
that they could offload cargo and strip that ship down for speed,
given time, shed mass without the need to lose a cargo. They would
not expect help more than that. That was logic speaking. But it hurt.
IV She sat and listened a
time in her cabin, finally contacted Geran belowdecks and turned over
the monitoring to her. "Faha," was Geran's only comment. "Hilfy knows,"
Pyanfar said. "So," Geran
murmured. And then: "I'm on. I've got it."
Pyanfar signed off and
sighed heavily, sitting on the edge of her bed, arms on her knees --
finally took a mild sedative and undressed and curled up in the
bowlshaped bed for a precious while of oblivion, trying not to think
of emergencies and contingencies and the horde of kif prowling about
the system. That did not work, but the
sedative did. She went under like a stone into a pond and came out
again startled by the alarm -- but it was only the timer going off,
and she lay in the bedclothes with her heart slowly stepping back
down to normal. "Any developments?"
she asked lowerdeck op by com from her bedside, not even having
crawled from beneath the sheets, but thrusting an arm out to push the
bottom on the console. "Anything happened while I was off?" "No, captain."
Haral's voice answered her. A shift change had occurred in her off
time. "The situation seems to be temporary stalemate. Station is
broadcasting only operational chatter now. We aren't getting much
from the kif. Nothing alarming. We'd have waked you if there was
news." So their orders ran.
Interpretations of emergency varied; but Haral was the wisest head in
the crew, the canniest. Pyanfar lay there staring at the ceiling a
moment and finally decided she might take her time. There was nowhere
to rush. The rib muscles she had strained in g force had stiffened.
"What about systems check? Has anyone had time to get to that?" "We're still running
the board, captain, but it looks good all the way. The blowout was
absolutely clean and the recalibration was right almost to the hair." "Better luck than we
deserve. What's the Outsider up to?" "Back at work at the
keyboard. Chur and Geran are off now, and Tirun's on, but I didn't
feel, by your leave, captain, that Tirun belonged in there with him
in her condition, and I've had all I can do with visual checks on the
separation readouts -- again by your leave." "You were right." "He's slept a bit. He
hasn't made any trouble . . . gods, he worked till he nearly dropped
over, Chur said; and he's back at it again this shift, shaky as he
is. We fed him right away when he woke up, and he ate it all and went
back to his drills, polite as you please. I've got his roomcom and
his comp monitored from the op station, so we've at least got an ear
toward him." "Huh." Pyanfar
ran a hand through her mane and scowled up at the brightening room
light. The alarm had started the day cycle in the room. "Let the
Outsider work; if it falls over, then let it rest. How's Tirun making
it?" "Limping, sore, and
working with the leg propped up. She's still white around the nose." "I'm all right,"
Tirun's voice cut in, usurping the same mike. "You go off,"
Pyanfar said, "anytime you feel you ought to. We're dead
drifting, and someone else can take up the slack if those first
checks are run. You see to it, Haral. Anything else I should know?" "That's the sum of
it," Haral said. "We're all right so far." "Huh," she said
again, got out of the spring-held sheets and cut the com off, pulled
on her black trousers and put on her belt, her bracelet, and her
several earrings -- shook the ear to settle them and gave her mane
and beard a quick comb into order. Vanity be hanged. She left the
cabin and paid a short visit to the galley, ate a solitary breakfast,
feeling somewhat better. She turned the pager to the monitor channel
in the meanwhile, listened to the chatter which was reaching them and
found it much what Haral had said, a lull in events which in itself
contained worrisome possibilities. By now the kif had surely figured
out what had happened, and by now they would be hunting in stealth --
hence the quiet. The Pride had undergone a great deal of lateral
drift from their entry point, but if she were that kif captain,
trying to reckon the arrival point of a cargoless fugitive on a jump
almost too much for the ship . . . she would calculate a fringe area
jump on a straight string from Meetpoint's mass to that
of Urtur. And that would fine the hunting zone down considerably,
from the vast tracts of Urtur's lenslike system -- to a specific zone
on the fringe, and the direction of systemic drift, and certain
places where a ship seeking cover might move. Time was the other
factor; time defined the segment of space in which they might
logically be drifting, two points-within-which, which then might be
fined down tighter and tighter. Time, time, and time. They were running out of
it. She shut off the pager,
went back to her cabin, spread out the charts of the last effort and
picked up a comp link of her own, started as precise calculations as
she could make on the options they had left. From the hani ship -- she
interrupted herself to query Haral and Tirun on the point -- there
had been nothing during the past watch. No transmission at all.
Starchaser would be feverishly busy at her own business, stripping
down, not provoking anything at this juncture. Waiting. All incoming
transmission indicated that ships of all kinds were moving toward
Urtur Station with all possible haste, a journey of days for some
ships, and of weeks for others of the insystem operators . . . but
even the gesture spoke to the kif, that the mahe would defend Urtur
Station itself, abandoning other points to whatever the kif wished to
do. The incoming jumpships had long since made it in, snugged close:
armed ships, those . . . but one at least was stsho, and its arms
were minor and its will to fight was virtually nonexistent. Again, she reckoned, if
she were that kif in command, those insystem ships would not go in
unchallenged. For all those incoming from the suspect vector where a
hani ship lay hidden, there would be closer scrutiny -- to make sure
a clever hani did not drift in disguised with the rest of the inbound
traffic. ID transmission would be checked, identifications run
through comp; ships might be boarded ... all manner of
unpleasantness. Most of them would pass visual inspection: there was
precious little resemblance between a gut-blown jump freighter with
its huge vanes, and a lumpy miner-processor whose propulsion was all
insystem and hardly enough to move it along with its tow full. Only the miners who might
have had the bad luck to come in from the farthest edge of The
Pride's possible location . . . they might be stopped, have their
records scanned, their comp stripped -- their persons subjected to
gross discomforts until they would volunteer information, if the kif
were true to nature. "Someone's jumped,
captain." Tirun's voice, out of the
com unit. Pyanfar dumped a complex calculation from her mind and
reached for the reply bar, twisting in her chair. "Who? Where?" "Just got the
characteristic ghost, that's all. I don't know. It was farside of
system and long ago. No further data; but it fits within our
timeline. That close." "Give me the image." Tirun passed it onto the
screen. Nadir range and badly muddled pickup: there was too much
debris in the way. "Right," she
said to Tirun. "No knowing." "Out?" Tirun
asked. "Out," Pyanfar
confirmed her, and keyed out the image as well, stared morosely at
the charts and the figures which, no matter how twisted, kept coming
up the same: that there was no way to singlejump beyond Urtur,
however reduced in mass they were now. That jump-ghost which had
just arrived might have been someone successfully running for it.
More ships than that one might have jumped from here, lost in the gas
and debris of Urtur's environs. But quite, quite likely
that ship was kif, a surplus ship moving on to arrange ambush at the
most logical jump point that they might use. Rot Akukkakk. She recalled
the flat black eyes, red-rimmed, the long gray face, the voice very
different from the whining tone of lesser kif. A bitter taste came
into her mouth. How many of them? she
wondered, and pulled the scattered charts toward her on the desk and
again thought like a kif, wondering just where he might station his
ships remaining at Urtur, having figured now, as he must have
figured, what they were up to. That inward flight which
was making the station safer -- was also giving this Akukkakk a free
field in which to operate. There were a finite number of opacities in
the quadrant where the sweep of debris might be concealing The Pride.
A diminishing number of other fugitives to confuse him . . . just
them and him, finally, along with whatever other kif ships he had
called in. Four kif ships had been at
Meetpoint. Some or all might have come with him. There might have
been as many more at Urtur when Hinukku came in. Eight ships, say.
Not beyond possibility. She made her calculations
again, flexed an ache from her shoulders, and pushed back from the
desk, combed her beard with her fingers and flicked her ears for the
soothing sound of the rings. Huh. So. She at least knew
their options -- or the lack of them. It was a thoroughly bad game to
have gotten into. She levered her aching body out of the chair it had
occupied too many hours, stretched again, calculating that they must
be about due for Chur and Geran to come on again. And Hilfy: there
had not been a word out of her. Possibly the imp had been late
getting to sleep after the news which had broken in on her rest. If
she had been sleeping, so much the better. Pyanfar walked out into
the corridor and down it, into the dim zone of the bridge, beyond the
archway, where most of the lights were out and the dead screens made
areas dark which should have been busy with lights. There was one
unexpected bright spot, a counter alight in that ell nook of the
bridge around the main comp bank. Someone had come back and left it
on, she thought, walking up on it to turn it out; and came on Hilfy
there, seated with her attention fixed on the translator, left hand
propping her forehead and her right hand poised over the translator
keyboard. The screen in front of her was alive with mahendo'sat
symbols. Audio brought in a pathetic Outsider-voiced attempt at
speech. Pyanfar frowned, walked closer, and Hilfy saw the movement
and half turned, turned back in haste to close off the audio from the
bridge. Pyanfar leaned on the back of her chair to observe the
strings of symbols on the screen, and Hilfy got up in haste. Go, the Outsider was
trying to say. That was the symbol on the screen at the moment. / go. "I thought you were
supposed to be resting," Pyanfar said. "I got tired of
resting." Pyanfar nodded toward the
screen, where the Figure Walking was displayed. "How's it
doing?" "He." "It, he, how's it
doing?" "Not so good on
pronunciation." "You've been cutting
in on his lessons? Talking to him?" "He doesn't know me
from the machine." Hilfy had her hands locked behind her, ears
flat, wary of reprimands. "You can't work the second manual
without help: it's sentences. He has to have prompts. I've got more
vocabulary filled in with him. We're well into abstracts and I've
been able to figure something about the way his own sentences are
built from what he keeps doing wrong with ours." "Huh. And have you
perchance gotten a name out of him amid these mistakes? His species?
An indication what he comes from? A location?" "No." "Well. I didn't
expect. But well done, all the same. I'll check it out." "Seven hundred
fifty-three words. He ran the whole first manual. Chur demonstrated
changing the keyboard and the cassette and he ran it all, just like
that; and got into the second book, trying to do sentences. But he
can't pronounce, aunt; it just comes out like that." "Mouth shape is
different. Can't say we can ever do much with his language either;
like trying to talk to the tc'a or the knnn . . . maybe even a
different hearing range, certainly not the same equipment to speak
with -- gods, no guaranteeing the same logic, but the latter I think
we may have. Some things he does make half sense." She lowered
herself into the vacated chair, reached and livened a second screen.
"Go talk Tirun out of her work down in op, imp; she's been on
duty and she shouldn't be. I'm going to try to run a translator tape
on your seven hundred fifty-three words." "I did that." "Oh, did you?" "While I was sitting
here." Hilfy untucked her hands from behind her and hastily
reached for the counter, indicated the cassette in the slot of the
translator input. "I pulled the basic pattern and sorted the
words in. Sentence logic too. It's finished." "Does it work?" "I don't know, aunt.
He hasn't given me a sentence in his own language. Just words.
There's no one for him to talk his own to." "Ah, well, so."
Pyanfar was impressed. She ran some of the audio of the tape past,
cut it, looked up at Hilfy, who looked uncommonly proud of herself.
"You're sure of the tape." "The master program
seemed clear. I -- learned the translator principles pretty
thoroughly; father didn't connect that so much with spacing. I got to
start that study from the first; but / knew what I wanted it for.
Like comp. I'm good at that." "Huh. -- Why don't we
try it, then?" Hilfy nodded, more and
more self-pleased. Pyanfar rose and searched through the com board
cabinets, pulled out the box of sanitary wrapped audio plugs and
dropped a handful of those into Hilfy's palm, then located a spare
pager from the same source. She sat down at main com and ran the
double channels of the translator through bands two and three of the
pagers. She took her own plug and inserted it in her ear, tested it
out linked to the Outsider's room com for a moment, and got nothing
back but bursts of white sound, which were mangled hani words that
part of the schizoid translator mind refused to recognize as words.
"We're two, he's three," she said to Hilfy, shutting the
audio down for the moment. "Bring him up here." "Here, aunt?" "You and Haral. This
Outsider who tries to impress us with his seven hundred fifty-three
words ... we find out once for all how his public manners are. Take
no chances, imp. If the translator fails, don't; if he doesn't act
stable, don't. Go." "Yes, aunt."
Hilfy stuffed the audio units and the other pager into her pockets,
hastened out the archway in a paroxysm of importance. "Huh," Pyanfar
said after her, stood staring in that direction. Her ears flicked
nervously, a jangling of rings. The Outsider might do anything. It
had chosen their ship to invade, out of a number of more convenient
choices. It. He. Hilfy and the crew seemed unshakeably convinced of
the he, on analogy to hani structure; but that was still no
guarantee. There were, after all, the stsho. Possibly it made the
creature more tragic in their eyes. Gods. Naked-hided,
blunt-toothed and blunt-fingered. ... It had had little chance in
hand-to-hand argument with a clutch of kif. It should be grateful for
its present situation. No, she concluded. It
should not. Everyone who got hands on it would have plans for this
creature, of one kind and another, and perhaps it sensed that: hence
its perpetually sullen and doleful look. She had her own plans, to be
sure. He, Hilfy insisted at
every opportunity. Her first voyage, a tragic (and safely
unavailable) alien prince. Adolescence. Gods. From the main section of
the com board, outside transmission buzzed, whined, lapsed into a
long convolute series of wails and spine-ruffling pipings. She jumped
in spite of herself, sat down, keyed in the translator on com. Knnn,
the screen informed her, which she already knew. Song. No
recognizable identity. No numerical content. Range: insufficient
input. That kind frequented Urtur
too, miners who worked without lifesupport in the methane hell of the
moon Uroji and found it home. Odd folk in all senses, many-legged
nests of hair, black and hating the light. They came to a station to
dump ores and oddments, and to snatch furtively at whatever trade was
in reach before scuttling back into the darknesses of their ships.
Tc'a might understand them . . . and the chi, who were less rational
... but no one had ever gotten a clear enough translation out of a
tc'a to determine whether the tc'a in turn made any sense of the
knnn. The knnn sang, irrationally, pleased with themselves; or
lovelorn; or speaking a language. No one knew (but possibly the tc'a,
and the tc'a never discussed any topic without wending off into a
thousand other tangents before answering the central questions,
proceeding in their thoughts as snake-fashioned as they did in their
physical movements). No one had gotten the knnn to observe proper
navigation: everyone else dodged them, having no other alternative.
Generally they did give off numerical messages, which the mechanical
translators had the capability to handle -- but they were a code for
specific situations . . . trade, or coming in, a blink code. There
was nothing unusual in knnn presence here, a creature straying where
it would, oblivious to oxygen-breather quarrels. There still came the
occasional ping or clang of dust and rock against The Pride's hull,
the constant rumbling of the rotational core, the whisper of air in
the ducts. The deadness of the instruments depressed her spirits.
Screens stared back in the shadow of the bridge like so many blinded
eyes. And they were out here
drifting with kif and rocks and a knnn who had no idea of the matters
at issue. "Captain," Tirun's voice broke in. "Hearing
you." "Got a knnn out there." "Hearing that too.
What are Hilfy and Haral doing about the Outsider?" "They've gone after
him; I'm picking that up. He's not making any trouble." "Understood. They're
on their way up here. Keep your ear to the outside comflow; going to
be busy up here." "Yes, captain." The link broke off.
Pyanfar dialed the pager to pick up the translator channel, received
the white-sound of hani words. Everything seemed quiet. Eventually
she heard the lift in operation, and heard steps in the corridor
leading to the bridge. He came like an apparition
against the brighter corridor light beyond, tall and angular, with
two hani shapes close behind him. He walked hesitantly into the
dimness of the bridge itself, clear now to the eyes . . . startlingly
pale mane and beard, pale skin mottled with bruises and the raking
streaks of his wound, sealed with gel but angry red. Someone's blue
work breeches, drawstring waisted and loose-kneed, accommodated his
tall stature. He walked with his head a little bowed, under the
bridge's lower overhead -- not that he had to, but that the overhead
might feel a little lower than he was accustomed to -- he stopped,
with Hilfy and Haral behind him on either side. "Come ahead,"
Pyanfar urged him farther, and rose from her place to sit braced
against the comp console, arms folded. The Outsider still had a
sickly look, wobbly on his feet, but she reached back to key the lock
on comp, which could only be coded free again, then looked back again
at the Outsider . . . who was looking not at her, but about him at
the bridge with an expression of longing, of -- what feeling someone
might have who had lately lost the freedom of such places. He came from a ship, then,
she thought. He must have. Hilfy stood behind him.
Haral moved to the other aisle, blocking retreat in that direction
should he conceive some sudden impulse. They had him that way in a
protective triangle, her, Hilfy, Haral; but he leaned unsteadily
against the number-two cushion which was nearest him and showed no
disposition to bolt. He wore the pager at his waist, had gotten the
audio plug into his ear, however uncomfortable it might be for him.
Pyanfar reached up and tightened her own, dialed the pager to
receive, looked back at him from her perch against the counter. "All
right?" she asked him, and his face turned toward her. "You do understand,"
she said. "That translator works both ways. You worked very hard
on it. You knew well enough what you were doing, I'll reckon. So
you've got what you worked to have. You understand us. You can speak
and make us understand you. Do you want to sit down? Please do." He felt after the bend of
the cushion and sank down on the arm of it. "Better,"
Pyanfar said. "What's your name, Outsider?" Lips tautened. No answer. "Listen to me,"
Pyanfar said evenly. "Since you came onto my ship, I've lost my
cargo and hani have died -- killed by the kif. Does that come through
to you? I want to know who you are, where you came from, and why you
ran to my ship when you could have gone to any other ship on the
dock. So you tell me. Who are you? Where do you come from? What do
you have to do with the kif and why my ship, Outsider?" "You're not friends
to the kif." Loud and clear. Pyanfar
drew in a breath, thrust her hands into her waistband before her and
regarded the Outsider with a pursed-lip smile. "So. Well. No,
we've said so; I'm not working for the kif and I'm no friend of
theirs. Negative. Does the word stowaway come through? Illegal
passenger? People who go on ships and don't pay?" He thought that over, as
much of it as did come through, but he had no answer for it. He
breathed in deep breaths as if he were tired . . . jumped as a burst
of knnn transmission came through the open com. He looked anxiously
toward that bank, hands clenched on the cushion back. "Just one of the
neighbors," Pyanfar said. "I want an answer, Outsider. Why
did you come to us and not to another ship?" She had gotten his
attention back. He looked at her with a thoughtful gnawing of a lip,
a movement finally which might be a shrug. "You sit far from the
kif ship. And you laugh." "Laugh?" He made a vague gesture
back toward Hilfy and Haral. "Your crew work outside the ship,
they laugh. They tell me no, go ####no weapons toward me. ### I come
back ###." "Into the rampway,
you mean." Pyanfar frowned. "So. What did you plan to do in
my ship? To steal? To take weapons? Is that what you wanted?" "##### no ####" "Slower. Speak slower
for the translator. What did you want on the ship?" He drew a deep breath,
shut his eyes briefly as if trying to collect words or thoughts.
Opened them again. "I don't ask weapons. I see the rampway . . .
here with hani, small afraid." "Less afraid of us,
were you?" She was hardly flattered. "What's your name?
Name, Outsider." "Tully," he
said. She heard it, like the occasional com sputter, from the other
ear ... a name like the natural flow of his language, which was purrs
and moans combined with stranger sounds. "Tully," she
repeated back; he nodded, evidently recognizing the effort. She
touched her own chest. Pyanfar Chanur is my name. The translator
can't do names for you. Py-an-far. Cha-nur." He tried. Pyanfar was
recognizable ... at least that he purred the rhythm into his own
tongue. "Good enough," she said. She sat more loosely,
linked her hands in her lap. "Civilized. Civilized beings should
deal with names. Tully. -- Are you from a ship, Tully, or did the kif
take you off some world?" He thought about that.
"Ship," he admitted finally. "Did you shoot at
them first? Did you shoot at the kif first, Tully?" "No. No weapons. My
ship have no weapons." "Gods, that's no way
to travel. What should I do with you? Take you back to what world,
Tully?" His hands tightened on the
back of the cushion. He stared at her bleakly past it. "You want
same they want. I don't say." "You come onto my
ship and you won't tell me. Hani are dead because of you, and you
won't tell me." "Dead." "Kif hit a hani ship.
They wanted you, Tully. They wanted you. Don't you think I should ask
questions? This is my ship. You came to it. Don't you think you owe
me some answers?" He said nothing. Meant to
say nothing, that was clear. His lips were clamped. Sweat had broken
out on his face, glistening in the dim light. "Gods rot this
translator," Pyanfar said after a moment. "All right, so
somebody treated you badly too. Is it better on this ship? Do we give
you the right food? Have you enough clothes?" He brushed at the
trousers. Nodded unenthusiastically. "You don't have to
agree. Is there anything you want?" "Want my door #." "What, open?" "Open." "Huh." His shoulders sagged. He
had not expected agreement on that, it was evident. He made a vague
motion of his hand about their surroundings. "Where are we? The
sound. . . ." The dust brushing past the
hull. It had been background noise, a maddening whisper they lived
with. Down in lower-deck, he would have heard a lot of it. "We're
drifting," she said. "Rocks and dust out there." "We sit at a jump
point?" "Star system."
She reached and cut on the telescope in the observation bubble,
bringing the image onto the main screen. The scope tracked to Urtur
itself, the inferno of energy in the center of the dusty lens-shaped
system, a ringed star which flung out tendrils the movement of which
took centuries, ropy filaments dark against the blaze of the center.
The image cast light on the Outsider's face, a moment of wonder:
Urtur deserved that. She saw his face and rose to her feet, moved to
the side of this shaggy-maned Outsider -- a calculated move, because
it was her art, to trade, to know the moment when a guard was down.
"I tell you," she said, catching him by the arm -- and he
shivered, but he made no protest at being drawn to his feet. He
towered above her as she pointed to the center of the image.
"Telescope image, you see. A big system, a horde of planets and
moons -- The dark rings there, that's where the planets sweep the
dust and rocks clear. There's a station in that widest band, orbiting
a gas giant. The system is uninhabited except for mahendo'sat miners
and a few knnn and tc'a who think the place is pleasant. Methane
breathers. But a lot of miners, a lot of people of all kinds are in
danger right now, in there, in that center. Urtur is the name of the
star. And the kif are in there somewhere. They followed us when we
jumped to this place, and now a lot of people are in danger because
of you. Kif are there, you understand?" "Authority." His
skin was cold under her fingerpads, his muscles hard and shivering,
whether from the relative coolness of the bridge's open spaces or
from some other cause. "Authority of this system. Hani?" "Mahendo'sat station.
They don't like the kif much either. No one does, but it's not
possible to get rid of them. Mahendo'sat, kif, hani, tc'a, stsho,
knnn, chi . . . all trade here. We don't all like each other, but we
keep our business to ourselves." He listened, silent, for
whatever he could understand of what she said. Com sputtered again,
the whistles and wailing of the knnn. "Some of them,"
Pyanfar said, "are stranger than you. But you don't know the
names, do you? This whole region of space is strange to you." "Far from my world,"
he said. "Is it?" That got a misgiving look
from him. He pulled away from her hand, looked at her and at the
others. "Wherever it is,"
Pyanfar said in nonchalance. She looked back at Haral and Hilfy. "I
think that's about enough. Our passenger's tired. He can go back to
his quarters." "I want talk you,"
Tully said. He took hold of the cushion nearest, resisting any
attempt to move him. "I want talk." "Do you?"
Pyanfar asked. He reached toward her. She stood still with difficulty
-- but he did not touch. He drew the hand back. "What is it you
want to talk about?" He leaned, standing,
against the cushion with both hands. His pale eyes were intent and
wild, and whatever the precise emotion his face registered, it was
distraught. "You #### me. Work, understand. I stay this ship and
I work same crew. All you want. Where you go. # give me ####." "Ah," she said.
"You're offering to work for your passage." "Work on this ship,
yes." "Huh." She
thrust her hands within her waistband and would have looked down her
nose at him, but it was a matter of looking up. "You make a
deal, do you? You work for me, Outsider? You do what I say? All
right. You rest now. You go back to your cabin and you learn your
words and you think how to tell me what the kif want with you --
because the kif still want this ship, you understand. They want you,
and they'll come after this ship." He thought about that a
moment. Almost he looked as if he might speak. His lips shaped a word
and took it back again, and clamped shut. And something sealed in
behind his eyes when he did that, a bleakness worse than had ever
been there. It sent a prickle down her
spine. This creature is thinking of dying, she thought. It was the
look from against the wall, from the corner in the washroom, but
colder still. "Hai," she said, in her best dockside manner,
and set her hand on his bowed shoulder, roughly but careful with the
claws. Shook at him. "Tully. You aren't strong enough yet to
work. Enough that you rest. You're safe. You understand me? Hani
don't trade with kif." There was a glimmering
then, a sudden break in that seal. He reached out quite unexpectedly
and seized her other hand, his blunt fingers both holding and
exploring it, the furred web he lacked, the pads of the tips.
Pressure hit the center of her hand and the claws came out, only
slightly: she was careful, though her ears flattened in warning. To
her further distress he set his other hand on her shoulder, then let
go both holds and looked about at Haral and Hilfy, then back at her
again. Crazy, she judged him; and then she thought about kif, and
reckoned that he had license for a little strangeness. "I'll
tell you something," she said, "for free. Kif followed you
across the Meetpoint dock to my ship; they followed my ship here to
Urtur, and right now we're sitting here, just trying to be quiet so
the kif don't find us. Trying to decide how best to get out of here.
There's one kif in particular, in command of a ship named Hinukka.
Akukkakk. ..." "Akukkakk," he
echoed, suddenly rigid. The sound came as names must, from the other
ear, his own voice. His eyes were dilated. "Ah. You do know." "He want take me his
ship. Big one. Authority." "Very big. They have a word for
his kind, do you know it? Hakkikt. That means he hunts and others
pick up the scraps he leaves. I lost something at Meetpoint: a hani
ship and my cargo. So did this great hakkikt, this great, this
powerful kif. You escaped him. You ran from him. So it's more than
profit that he wants out of this. He wants you, Tully, to settle
accounts. It's his pride at stake, his reputation. For a kif, that's
life itself. He's not going to give up. Do you know, he I tried to
buy you from me. He offered me gold, a lot of gold. He might even
have kept the deal straight and not delayed for piracy afterward.
He's that desperate." Tully's eyes drifted from her to the
others and back again. You deal with him?" "No. I want something
for dead hani and lost cargo. I want this great hakkikt. You hear me,
Tully?" "Yes," Tully
said suddenly, "/want same." "Aunt," Hilfy
protested in a faint voice. "You want to work,"
Pyanfar said, ignoring her niece's disquiet. "There'll be the
chance for that. But you wait, Tully. You rest. At shift change, I'll
call you again. You come eat with us. Meal, understand? But you get
some rest first, hear? You work on my ship, you take orders first.
Follow instructions. Right?" "Yes," he said. "Go, then. Haral and
Hilfy will take you back down. Go." He nodded, delivered
himself over to Haral and Hilfy together: not a backward look from
either of them as they took him out. Or from him. She watched them
go, found herself rubbing the hand that he had touched. The knnn song wailed out
again. Neighbors to the kif, the knnn. That bore remembering. That
one was uncommonly talkative. No one was ever sure what knnn senses
were, or what motivated their migrations from star to star. She turned to the com
bank, pushed Record, and sent the song again to the translator. It
gave her no more information than the last time. The song ceased, and
there remained only the whisper of the dust. Urtur system everywhere
had grown very still. The translator still
carried white sound, Haral's voice or Hilfy's. The Outsider was
saying nothing in being taken back to his quarters. She was
marginally uneasy about having him out of sight. Perhaps he was mad
after all. Perhaps he would suicide and leave them with nothing to
show for the encounter but a feud with the kif. Up to a point she
could not prevent him killing himself, except by taking measures
which would not encourage his good will. But revenge was something
of purpose, something to make life worthwhile. She had offered him
that. She thought of his face
close at hand, lively, crazed eyes, a hand as cold as something an
hour dead -- a creature, she reminded herself, who had been fighting
alone an enemy which would have turned a stsho to jelly. She grinned somewhat, a
drawing back of the lips and wrinkling of the nose, and stared
thoughtfully toward the telescope image. No disengagement possible.
Not with this kif prince, this hakkikt Akukkakk, whose personal
survival rode on this Outsider business. His own sycophants would
turn on him if he lost face in this matter. He had lost this Outsider
personally . . . likely by some small carelessness, the old kif game
of tormenting victims with promises and threats and shreddings of the
will. An old game . . . one which hani understood; irresistible to a
kif who thrived on fear in his victims. Akukkakk had to make up
that embarrassment at Meet-point. He would have been obliged to
revenge if it were so much as a bauble stolen from him at dockside.
But this Outsider Tully was far more than that. A communicative,
spacefaring species, hitherto unknown, in a position to have come
into kif hands without passing through more civilized regions. The
kif had new neighbors. Possible danger to them. Possible expansion of kif
hunting grounds ... in directions which had nothing to do with hani
and mahendo'sat. Those were high stakes, impossibly high stakes to be
riding on one poor fugitive. Urtur would swarm with
kif, before all was said and done. She delved into the com
storage and started hunting components for a transmitter of some
power, roused out Chur and sent her hunting through the darker areas
of The Pride's circumference for other supplies.
V It was a monster, like
Tully, this thing that they constructed in the spotlit, chill bowels
of The Pride's far rim. It had started out hani-shaped, a patched and
hazardous EVA-pod which they had stripped for parts and never
succeeded in foisting off on another hani ship. Its limbs had just
grown longer, sectioned off and spliced with tubing, and it was
rigged with a wheezing lifesupport system. "Get Tully,"
Pyanfar said applying herself to the last of the welding which should
get the system in order. "Rouse him out." And Chur went,
bedraggled as herself with the dust and the grime of The Pride's
salvage storage. Pyanfar worked, spliced
and cursed when the system blew in another frustrating curl of smoke,
unhitched that component and rummaged for a new one, sealed that in
and congratulated herself when it worked, a vibration and a flicker
of green lights on the belt and inside the helmet. She grinned, wiped
her hands on the blue work breeches she had put on for this grimy
task ... a long time since she had practiced such things, a long time
since she had worn blue roughspun and gotten blisters on her hands.
In her youth, under another of The Pride's captains, she had done
such things, but only Haral and Tirun could recall those days. She
licked a burn on her finger and squatted on the deck, content with
the operation of the unit. Let it run a while, she decided: see if it
would go on working. The suit stared back, stiff and gangling on its
huge feet, reflecting her in distant miniature off its curved
faceplate. It stood like some mahendo'sat demon, two limbs shy of
that description, but ghastly enough in its exposed hoses and its
malproportioned height, against the dark of the surrounding
machine-shop. A reek of blood mingled with the singed smell of the
welding. A bucket on the deck caught the occasional drip from the
skinned carcass which hung beyond it under the light. It was a little more than
hani-sized, chained up to the hoist-track above, long-faced head
adroop on a longish neck, to thaw and drain. It had begun to reek
under the lights. The long limbs were coming untucked, and the belly
gaped. Uruus. Sweet meat and a fat one: the best steaks had already
headed galleyward, in this raid on their private larder. It had
wounds this carcass, but that only lengthened the limbs, letting the
haunches drop. The door unsealed and
sealed in the dark distance; steps whispered along the metal
flooring. Pyanfar adjusted her translator and got nothing, but she
could see the lights go on in the far dark expanse, illusionlike and
high because of the upward curve of the deck in the vast storage
chamber, picking out two figures, one gangling tall and pale. She sat
and waited as the lights turned themselves on and off in sequence
along the walkway, bringing the two nearer and nearer where she sat. Tully and Chur, of course.
The Outsider came willingly enough, but he stopped dead when he came
close, and the light went out on him, leaving him and Chur in the
dark outside the area where Pyanfar sat. She stood up, making him out
clearly enough in the shadow. "Tully, it's safe. Come on. it's
all right, Tully." He did come, slowly, alien
shadow in the rest of the strangeness, and Chur had hold of his arm
in case. He looked at the vacant suit, and at the hanging carcass,
and kept staring at it. "Animal,"
Pyanfar said. "Tully. I want you to see what we're doing. I want
you to understand. Hear?" He turned toward her, eyes
deep in their shadowed sockets, the angled light glancing off a pale
mane and planes of feature decidedly un-hani. "You put me in
this?" "Put that in the
suit," Pyanfar said cheerfully. "Transmitter sending signal
hard as it can. We tell the kif that we're throwing you out and we
give them that, you understand, Outsider. Make them chase that. And
we run." It began to get through to
him. His eyes flickered over the business again, the vacant suit, the
frozen carcass "Their instruments see in it," he said. "Their instruments
will scan it, yes; and that's what they'll get." He gestured toward the
carcass. "This? This?" "Food," she said. "Not
a person, Tully. Animal. Food." Of a sudden his face took
on an alarming grin. His body heaved with a choking sound she
realized finally for laughter. He clapped Chur on the shoulder,
turned that convulsed face toward her with moisture streaming from
his eyes and still with that mahendo'sat grin. "You # the kif." "Put that inside,"
she told him, motioning toward the carcass. "Bring it. You help,
Tully." He did, with Chur, his
rangy body straining against the half-frozen weight, an occasional
grimace of what might be disgust at the look or the feel of it.
Pyanfar shut down the pod's lifesupport, opened up their work of art,
and wrinkled her nose as the Outsider and Chur brought the reeking
carcass over. There was trim work to do. She abandoned fastidiousness
and did it herself, having some notion how it might fit. The head
could be gotten into the helmet, a bit of the neck to stuff the
vacant body cavity of the carcass, and a little scoring and breaking
of the rib cage, a sectioning and straightening of stiff limbs. "Going to smell good
if that drifts a while with the heater on," Chur observed. Tully
laughed his own choking laugh and wiped his face, smearing his
mustache with the muck which coated his arms to the elbow. Pyanfar
grinned, suddenly struck with the incongruity of things, squatting
here in the dark with a crazed alien and a suit full of uruus
carcass, the three of them in insane conspiracy. "Hold it,"
she ordered Chur, trying to get the belly seam fastened. Chur held
the sides together at the bottom and Tully helped at the top, and
there it was, sealed and Tully-shaped. "Come," Pyanfar
said, taking the feet, and Tully and Chur energetically got purchase
on its shoulders, lumbering along with it as the lights recognized
their presence and began to go on and off as they traveled. "Cargo dump?"
Chur asked. "Airlock,"
Pyanfar said. "Should passengers leave a ship by any other
route?" It was no light weight.
They staggered along the walk with the body of the pod dragging at
this and that point, got it onto a cargo carrier at the next section
and breathed sighs of relief as it lay corpsewise on the carrier,
mirrored faceplate staring up at the overhead. Tully was white and
trembling from the exertion: sweat stood on his skin and he held onto
the carrier's endrail, panting, but bright eyed. "You're Pyanfar,
right?" he asked between breaths. "Pyanfar?" "Yes," she
owned, wiped an itch on her nose with a dirty hand, reckoning she
could get no dirtier, nodded at Chur and gave him Chur's name again. "I #," he said,
nodding affirmative. He pushed enthusiastically when they pushed, and
they got the thing moving easily down the aisle through interior
storage, past the hulking shadows of the tanks and the circulating
machinery, out again into the normal lighted sections of belowdecks,
under a lower ceiling, and through ordinary corridors to the lock. "# he go #?"
Tully asked, staggered as he helped them offload the pod, looked
anxiously leftward as the lock's inner hatch opened. "Go quick
out?" "Ah, no,"
Pyanfar said. She carried the feet through and braced them as Chur
and Tully got the upper body through and upright. "There,
against the outer hatch. We blow that, and he'll go right nicely."
She set the feet down and added her weight as they heaved and braced
it, stood back and surveyed her handiwork with a grin and a thought
of the kif. She powered up the lifesupport with a touch of the
buttons on the belt, and it stood a little stiffer, on minimum
maintenance. She shut it down again, not to waste a good cylinder. And for the moment Tully
stood staring at it too, panting and sweating, arms at his sides and
a haggard look suddenly in place of the laughter, an expression which
held something of a shudder, as if after all he had begun to think
about that thing and his situation, and to reckon questions he had
not asked. "Out," Pyanfar
said, motioning Chur from the lock, including Tully with that sweep
of her arm. He hesitated. She moved to take his arm in his seeming
daze, and he suddenly hung his hand on her shoulder, one and then the
other, and bowed his head against her cheek, brief gesture, quickly
dropped, hands withdrawn as swiftly as her ears flattened. She caught
herself short of a hiss, deliberately patted his hairless shoulder
and brought him on through the lock into the corridor. Thank you, that act seemed
to signify. So. It had subtler understandings, this Tully. She
flicked her ears, a look which got a quickly turned shoulder from
Chur, and shoved the Outsider leftward in Chur's direction. "Go
clean up," she said. "Get showered, hear? Wash." Chur took him, indicated
to him that he should help her with the carrier, and they went
trundling it past and down the corridor to put that back where it
belonged. Pyanfar blew a short breath and closed the interior lock,
then headed for the common washroom where she had left her better
clothes -- did a small shudder of the skin where the Outsider's hand
had rested on her shoulder. But it had understood what
they were doing, very well understood what they were up to with the
decoy, and that in fact it was not all a matter of humor. Gods rot the kif. And then she thought of
the uruus' solemn long face, so benignly stupid, and of the deadly
pride of the great hakkikt of the kif, and her nose wrinkled in
laughter which had nothing to do with humor.
Supper was on, a delicious
aroma from the galley topside, Hilfy and Geran having stirred about
for some time in that quarter and in the larger facilities below. It
was a real meal this time, one of the delightsome concoctions Geran
was skilled at, the penultimate contribution of the uruus to their
comfort, prepared with all the care they lavished on food on more
ordinary voyages, when food was an obsession, a precious variance in
routine, an art they practiced to delight their occasional passengers
and to amaze themselves. Now dinner came with as
great a welcome, aromatic courage wafting the airflow from that
corridor, and Pyanfar set her com links to the bridge and did what
wanted doing there to secure the place, at the last with her hands
all but trembling from hunger, and with an aching great hollow in the
middle of her. There had been nothing dire so far, only nuisance
coming over com, no indication of trouble more than they already had;
and the suited uruus waited in the lock, melting and still. . . she
checked the airlock vid ... on its somewhat altered feet against the
outer hatch. She cut that image and checked the galley/commonroom
link again, picked up Hilfy's voice and shunted the flow the other
way, vowed a great curse on any kif who might interrupt such an hour
as they had earned. But the link was there if needed and the unit in
the commonroom would carry any business it had to. She got the word
from Geran and passed it over allship, finally left the bridge and
walked on round to dinner, clean again and full of anticipation. She grinned inside and out
at the sight, the table lengthened so that it hardly gave them room
to edge around it, the center spread with fantastical culinary
artistry, platters of meat, by the gods, no stale freeze-dried chips
and jerky and suchlike; gravies and sauces in which tidbits floated,
garnished with herbs and crackling bits of fat. The sterile white
commonroom was transformed, and Hilfy and Geran hastened about to lay
cushions with bright patterns, Chanur heraldry, red and gold and
blue. "Wondrous,"
Pyanfar pronounced it, inhaling. Places for seven. She heard the lift
and looked toward the corridor. In short order came Haral and Chur
with Tully in tow, and Tirun limped along behind them, using her
pipe-cane. "Sit, sit," Pyanfar bade them and Tully, and
they sorted themselves and edged along as they had to in the narrow
confines, took then-places shoulder to shoulder. Pyanfar held the
endmost seat bridgeward, Haral the endmost galleyward, and Tirun and
Chur sandwiched Tully between them, while Hilfy and Geran took the
other side. It presented a bizarre sight, this whitegold mane between
two ruddy gold ones, hairless shoulders next to redbrown coated ones,
and Tully hunching slightly to try to keep his gangling limbs out of
his seatmates' way . . . Pyanfar chuckled in good humor and made the
health wish, which got the response of the others and startled Tully
by its loudness. Then she poured gfi from her own flask by her cup;
the whole company reached for theirs and did the same, Tully
imitating them belatedly, and for a moment there was nothing but the
clatter of knives and cups and plates as Geran's and Hilfy's
monuments underwent swift demolition. Tully took snatches of this and
that as the dishes rotated past him on the table's rotating center,
small helpings at first, as if he were not sure what he had a right
to, and larger ones as he darted furtive glances at what others took,
and ladled on sauces and laid by small puddles of this and that in
the evident case it might not come round a second time. No questions
from him. "Uruus," Chur
said wickedly, crooking a claw onto his arm to catch his attention,
gestured at the steaks. "Same thing, this, the animal we give
the kif." Tully looked momentarily
uncertain, poked at the steak with his knife and looked up again at
Chur's grin. "Same, this?" "Same," Chur
confirmed. Tully took on an odd look, then started eating, laughed to
himself after a moment in a crazed fashion, shoulders bowed and
attention turned wholly to the food, darting only occasional glances
to their hands, trying to handle the utensils hani-style. "Good?" Pyanfar
broke the general silence. Tully looked up at once, darted looks at
them in general, helpless to know who had spoken. The translator
speaking into his ear had no personality. "I, Pyanfar. All
right, Tully? This food's all right for you?" "Yes," he said.
"I'm hungry." Hungry, the translator said into her ear,
dispassionately; but the look on his face for a moment put a great
deal more into it. The bruises showed starkly clear in the
commonroom's white light; the angularity of bones reached the surface
on his shoulders and about his ribs. "Says he's cold most
of the time," Chur said. "He doesn't have our natural
covering, after all. I tried a jacket on him, but he's too big. He
still wants it, asks to cut it. Maybe better to start with something
of Haral's in the first place." "Still too small for
those arms," Haral judged. "But I'll see what I can find." "Cold," Tully
said, in his limited understanding of the discussion. "We're trying,
Tully," Chur said. "I ask Haral, understand. Maybe find you
something." Tully nodded. "#"
he said forlornly, and then with a bright expression and a gesture at
the meal: "Good. Good." "Not complaining, are
you?" Pyanfar commented. "Don't -- Gods." The com broke in, a
knnn-song, and Tully jumped. Everyone looked up reflexively toward
the speaker, and Pyanfar drew a deep breath when knnn was all it
turned out to be. Tully alone kept staring that way. "That's nothing,"
Pyanfar said. "Knnn again. It'll shut up in a moment." She
looked soberly at the others, now that business was on her mind. "Got
ourselves a course laid, in case. It's in the comp when we need it.
And we will. Got ourselves a decoy rigged too, Chur and Tully and I
-- a gift for the kif that's going to cost them critical speed if
they want to pick it up; got it fixed so it'll look good to their
sensors." There was a moment's
silence. "All right to talk?"
Hilfy asked. Pyanfar nodded without
comment. "Where?" Hilfy
asked. "If we're running -- where? Meet-point again?" "No. I considered
that, to be sure, throwing the kif off by that. But figuring it and
refiguring -- we came close enough not making it when we came in with
all Urtur's mass to fix on; and there's not a prayer of doing it in
reverse with only Meetpoint's little mass to bring us up. I've worked
possible courses over and over again, and there's nothing for it --
twojump, to Kirdu. It's a big station; and there's help possible
there." "The kif," said
Geran, "will have it figured too. They'll intercept us at Kita." "So we string the
jumps," Pyanfar said, taking a sip of gfi. "No other way,
Geran, absolutely no other." "Gods," Chur
muttered undiplomatically. Hilfy's expression was troubled, quick
darts of the eyes toward the others, who were more experienced. Tully
had stopped eating again and looked up too, catching something of the
conversation. "Consecutive jump,"
Pyanfar said to Hilfy. "No delay for recovery time, no velocity
dump in the interval and gods know, a hazard where we're going: we're
bound to boost some of this debris through with us. But the risk is
still better than sitting here while the kif population increases.
There's one jump point we have to make: Kita. Past Kita Point, the
kif have to take three guesses where we went -- Kura, Kirdu, Maing
Tol. They might guess right after all, but they still might disperse
some ships to cover other possibilities." "We're going home,"
Hilfy surmised. "Who said going home?
We're going to sort this out, that's what. We're going to shake a few
of them. Get ourselves a place where we can find some allies. That's
what we're doing." "Then the Faha -- we
could warn them." "What, spill where
we're bound? They'll figure too ... the best hope's Kirdu. They'll
likely go there." "We could warn them.
Here. Give them a chance to get out." "They can take care
of themselves." "After we brought the
trouble here -- " "My decision,"
Pyanfar said. "I'm not saying that;
I'm saying -- " "We can't help them
by springing in their direction. Or how do you plan to get word to
them? We'll make it worse for them, we can only make it worse. You
hear me?" "I hear." The
ears went back, pricked up with a little effort. There was a silence
at table, except for the knnn, who wailed on alone, rapt in whatever
impulse moved knnn to sing. And stopped. "Gods,"
Haral muttered irritably, shot a worried look the length of the
table. Pyanfar returned it, past Hilfy, past the Outsider. "Pyanfar." Tully
spoke, sat holding his cup as if he had forgotten it, something
obviously welling up in him which wanted saying, with a look close to
panic. "I talk?" he asked. And when Pyanfar nodded: "What
move make this ship?" "Going closer to home
territory, to hani space. We're going where kif won't follow us so
easily, and where there's too much hani and mahendo'sat traffic to
make it easy for them to move against us. Better place, you
understand. Safer." He set down the cup, made
a vague gesture of a flat nailed long-fingered hand. "Two jump." "Yes." "#. Need #, captain.
#." He was sorely, urgently
upset. Pyanfar drew in a breath, made a calming gesture. "Again,
Tully. Say again. New way." "Sleep. Need sleep in
jump." "Ah. Like the stsho.
They have to, yes. I understand; you'll have your drugs, then, make
you sleep, never fear." He had started shaking. Of
a sudden moisture broke from his eyes. He bowed his head and wiped at
it, and was quiet for the moment. Everyone was, recognizing a
profound distress. Perhaps he realized: he stirred in the silence and
clumsily picked up his knife and jabbed at a bit of meat in his
plate, carried it to his mouth and chewed, all without looking up. "You need drugs to
sleep," Pyanfar said, "and the kif took you through jump
without them. That's what they did, was it?" He looked up at her. "Were you alone when
you started, Tully? Were there others with you?" "Dead," he said
around the mouthful, and swallowed it with difficulty. "Dead." "You know for sure." "I'm sure." "Did you talk to the
kif? Did you tell them what they asked you?" A shake of his head. "No?" "No," Tully
said, looked down again and up under his pale brows. "We give
wrong # to their translator." "What, the wrong
words?" He still had the knife in
his hand. It stayed there with its next morsel, the food forgotten. "He fouled their
translator," Tirun exclaimed in delight. "Gods!" "And not ours?"
Pyanfar observed. Tully's eyes sought toward
her. "I thought you ran
that board too quickly," Pyanfar said. "Clever Outsider.
We, you said. Then there were more of you in the kif s hands at the
start." "The kif take four of
us. They take us through jump with no medicine, awake, you
understand; they give us no good food, not much water, make us work
this translator keyboard same you have. We know what they want from
us. We make slow work, make we don't understand the keyboard, don't
understand the symbols, work all slow. They stand small time. They
hit us, bad, push us, bad -- make us work this machine, make quick.
We work this machine all wrong, make many wrong words, this word for
that word, long, long tape -- some right, most wrong. One day, two,
three -- all wrong." His face contorted. "They work the
tape and we make mistake more. They understand what we do, they take
one of us, kill her. Hit us all, much. They give us again same work,
make a tape they want. We make number two tape wrong, different
mistake. The kif kill second one my friends. I -- man name Dick James
-- we two on the ship come to station. They make us know this
Akukkakk; he come aboard ship see us. He -- " Again a contortion
of the face, a gesture. "He -- take my friend arm, break it,
break many time two arms, leg -- I make fight him, do no good; he hit
me -- walk outside. And my friend -- he ask -- I kill him, you
understand. I do it; I kill my friend, # kif no more hurt him." The silence about the
table was mortal. Pyanfar cleared her throat. Others' ears were back,
eyes dilated. "They come,"
Tully went on quietly. "Find my friend dead. They # angry, hit
me, bring me out toward this second ship. Outside. Docks. I run. Run
-- long time. I come to your ship." He ducked his head, looked
up again with a wan, mahendo'sat smile. "I make the keyboard
right for you." "That kif wants
killing," Haral said. "Tully," Pyanfar
said. "I understand why you're careful about questions about
where you come from. But I'll lay odds your space is near the kif --
you just listen to me. I think your ship got among kif, and now they
know there's a spacefaring species near their territories, either one
they can take from -- or one they're desperately afraid is a danger
to them. I don't know which you are. But that's what the kif wanted
with you, I'm betting -- to know more about you. And you know that.
And you're reluctant to talk to us either." Tully sat unmoving for a
moment. "My species is human." She caught the word from his
own speech. "Human." "Yes, they try ask
me. I don't say; make don't understand." "Your ship -- had no
weapons. You don't carry them?" No answer, "You didn't know
there was danger?" "Don't know this
space, no. Jump long. Two jump. # we hear transmission." "Kif?" He shook his head, his
manner of no. "I hear -- " He pointed to the com, which
remained silent. "That. Make that sound." "Knnn, for the gods'
sake." He touched his ear. "Say
again. Don't understand." "Knnn. A name. A
species. Methane breather. You were in knnn territory. Worse and
worse news, my friend. Knnn space is between stsho and kif." "Captain," said
Geran, "I'd lay bets with a chi the stsho had a finger in this
too. Their station, after all ... where the kif felt free to move him
about the dock in public ... I daresay the kif didn't get any
questions at all from the stsho." Pyanfar nodded
thoughtfully, recalling the stsho official, the change in that office
or that officer. A smiling welcome, impassive moonstone eyes and
delicate lavender brows. A certain cold went up her back. "Stsho'd
turn a blind eye to anything that looked like trouble, that's sure --
Imp," she said, seeing Hilfy's laidback ears and dilated eyes,
"pay attention: this is the way of our friends and allies out
here. Gods rot them. -- Eat your dinner." Tully stirred his plate
about, turned his attention back to that, and Pyanfar chewed another
bite, thoughtful. Knnn, kif, stsho . . .
gods, the whole pot had been stirred when this Outsider, this human,
dropped into the middle of it. An uncomfortable feeling persisted at
the back of her neck, like a cold wind of belated reason. The whole
dock at Meetpoint, zealously trying not to hear or see anything
amiss, with a fugitive on the loose and the kif on the hunt. . . . There was no particular
evil in the stsho -- except the desire to avoid trouble. That had
always been the way of them. But they were different. No hani read
past the patterns. No hani understood them. And, gods, if the knnn
were stirred up -- along with the kif. ... She swallowed the dry
mouthful and washed it down with a draught of gfi, poured herself
another cupful. Tully ate with what looked like appetite. Food
disappeared all round the table, and the plates rotated for second
helpings. "I'm going to put
Tully on limited assignment," she said. "He can't read,
sure enough. But some things he can do." He had looked up.
"Niece," she said, "you're no longer junior-most on
The Pride, this run. Ought to make you happy." Hilfy's brown study
evaporated into disquiet. "He's junior-most?" "A willing worker,"
Pyanfar said, with a wrinking of her nose. "Your responsibility
in part, now." "Aunt, I -- " "I told you how it
was, niece. Hear? You know what we're dealing with, and what stakes
are involved?" "I hear," Hilfy
said in a faint voice. "No, I don't know. But I'm figuring it
out." "Kif," Geran
spat. "They're different, when the odds go against them." "Once -- " Haral
said, and winced. The knnn song was back again, shriller. "Rot
that." "Close," Pyanfar
judged. It was exceedingly clear reception. She met Haral's eyes
facing her down the length of the table, more and more uneasy. The
song continued for a moment, too loud to talk above it, then wailed
away, gibbering to itself into lower tones. "Too rotted close,"
Haral said. "Captain -- " Pyanfar started to push
herself back from table, surrendering to anxiety. "Chanur Captain,"
com said far more faintly, a clicking voice speaking the hani tongue.
"Chanur Captain -- don't trouble to acknowledge. Only listen.
..." Pyanfar stiffened, looked
toward com with a bristling at her nape and a lowering of her ears.
Everyone was frozen in place. "The bargain you
refused at Meetpoint . . . is no longer available. Now I offer other
terms, equal to the situation. A new bargain. A safe departure from
this system, for yourself and for the Faha ship now at dock. I
guarantee things which properly interest you, in return for one which
doesn't. Jettison the remnant of your cargo, hani thief. You know our
ways. If you do the wise thing, we will not pursue you further. You
know that we are the rightful owners of that merchandise. You know
that we know your name and the names of your allies. We remember
wrongs against us. All kif. . . remember crimes committed against us.
But purge your name, Pyanfar Chanur. More, save lives which were not
originally involved in your act of piracy. Give us only our property,
Pyanfar Chanur, and we will take no further action against the Faha
and yourself. That is my best offer. And you know now by experience
that I mahe no empty threat. Is this matter worth your sure
destruction and that of the Faha? Or if you think to run away again,
deserting your ally, will you hope to run forever? That will not
improve your trade, or mahe you welcome at stations who will learn
the hazard of your company. Give it up, thief. It's small gain
against your loss, this thing you've stolen." "Akukkakk,"
Pyanfar said in a low voice when it had done. "So." "Aunt," Hilfy
said, carefully restrained. "They're going to go after
Starchaser. First." "Undoubtedly they
are." The message began to repeat. Pyanfar thrust herself to her
feet. "Gods rot that thing. Down it." Chur was nearest. She
sprang from her seat and turned down the volume of the wall unit.
Others had started working themselves out of their places, Tully
among them. Sweat had broken out on his skin, a fine, visible dew. "Seal the galley,"
Pyanfar said. "Secure for jump. We're moving." Hilfy turned a last,
pleading look on her. Pyanfar glowered back. And with Geran urging
him to move on, Tully delayed, putting out a hand to touch Pyanfar's
shoulder. "Sleep," Tully pleaded, reminding her, panic
large in his eyes. "For the gods' sake
put him out," Pyanfar snarled, turned and thrust her own plate
and some of the nearer dishes into the disposal, shoved others into
the hands of Haral and Tirun and Chur, who were throwing things in as
fast as they could snatch them. Hilfy started to help. "Out,"
Pyanfar said to Chur. "That business in the
airlock . . . get its lifesupport going. Move it!" Chur scrambled over the
top of the table and ran for the doorway in a scrabbling of claws.
Pyanfar turned with fine economy and stalked out in her wake, toward
controls. Tirun limped after her, but Pyanfar had no disposition to
wait. Anxiety prickled up and down her gut, disturbing the meal she
had just eaten, sudden distrust of all the choices she had made up
till now, including the one that had a slightly crazed Outsider loose
on the ship in a crisis; and knnn near them; and their eyes blinded
and their ears deaf to the outside. . . . She walked into the
darkened bridge, slid into the well worn cushion which knew her
body's dimensions, settled in and belted in, heard the stir of others
about her, Tirun, Hilfy, Haral. The kif voice continued over com.
Elsewhere she heard Tully pleading with Geran over something, trying
to get something through the translator which he could only half say.
She started running perfunctory clear checks, all internal, threw a
look toward her companions. Haral and Tirun were settled and running
personal checks on their posts, rough and solid and intent on
business. Hilfy had her ears back, her hands visibly shaking in
getting her boards ready. So. It was one thing, to ride through kif
fire at Meetpoint . . . quite another to face it after thinking about
it. "Please," a
mahendo'sat voice came through, relayed suddenly from Hilfy's board
to hers. "Stand off from station. We appeal to all sides for
calm. We suggest arbitration. ..." They had thrown that out
on longrange, plea to all the system, to all their unruly guests,
this station full of innocents, where all who could in the system had
taken refuge. And among them,
Starchaser. "That had to antedate
the other message," Pyanfar said morosely. "It's all old
history at station." That for Hilfy, to get her mind straight.
Tully was still talking: she took the translator plug from her ear,
shutting down all communication from that quarter, trusting Geran's
not inconsiderable right arm if all else failed. "Captain." That
was Chur on allship. " Lifesupport's on and the lock's sealed
again." "Understood, Chur,"
she muttered, plying the keyboard and calling up her course
plottings. "Take station in lower-deck op." She would
rather Chur on the bridge; but there was Tully loose; there was a kif
loose, and time running on them -- it was getting late to risk
someone moving about in the corridors. She spun half about,
indecisive. Hilfy, the weak link, sat at com, scan backup. "What's
the kif doing? Any pickup?" "Negative,"
Hilfy said calmly enough. "Repeat of message. I'm getting a
garble out of ships insystem, no sign yet of any disruption. The
knnn. ..." That sound moaned through
main com again, a transmission increasingly clear and distinct.
Closer to them in this maelstrom of dust and debris. Pyanfar sucked
in a breath. "Stand by to transmit, full sensors, all systems; I
want a look out there, cousins." She started throwing switches.
The Pride's nervous system came alive again in flares of color and
light, busy ripplings across the boards as systems recalibrated
themselves. She hit propulsion and reoriented, reached for the main
comp. "Gods," Tirun
muttered, throwing to her number-one screen the scan image which was
coming in, a dusty soup pocked with rocks. "Ship," Haral
said suddenly, number-one scan, and overrode with that sectorized
image. Panic hit Pyanfar's gut. That was close to them, and moving. "Resolution,"
she demanded. The Pride was accelerating, without her shields as yet.
The whisper of dust over the hull became a shriek, a scream: they hit
a rock and it shrilled along the hull; hit another and a screen
erupted with static. "Gods, this muck!" "Shields," Haral
said. "Not yet." "No resolution,"
Tirun said. "Too much debris out there. We're still blind." " "Gods rot it."
She hit the airlock control, blew it. "We lost something,"
Tirun said; "Beeper output," Hilfy said at once. "Loud
and clear. Aunt, is that our decoy?" Pyanfar ignored the
questions, harried. "Longrange com to my board. Now." It came through
unquestioned, a light on her panel. She put the mike in. "This
is Pyanfar Chanur, Hinukku. We've just put a pod out the lock. Call
it enough, hakkikt. Leave off." And breaking that contact,
to Hilfy: "Get that on repeat, imp, twice over; and then cut all
signal output and ID transmission and output the signal on translator
channel five." Half a second of
paralysis: Hilfy reached for the board, froze and then punched
something else over, static-ridden snarl, a hani voice. "Chanur!
Go! We're moving!" It repeated, a rising shriek of urgency like
that of the debris against the hull. "It's not our
timeline," Pyanfar snapped at Hilfy, but Hilfy was already
moving again, outputting one transmission, then clearing, reaching
with ears back and a panicked look after what recording she had been
ordered, however insane. "Prime course laid,"
Haral pronounced imperturbably. "Referent bracketed." "Stand by."
Their acceleration continued: the dust screamed over the hull.
Another screen broke up and recovered. "Aunt," Hilfy
exclaimed, "we're outputting knnn signal." "Right we are,"
Pyanfar said through her teeth. She angled The Pride for system
zenith, where no outgoing ship belonged. A prickle of sweat chilled
her nose, sickly cold, and the wail over the hull continued. "Readout
behind us," Geran said, "confirmed knnn, that ship back
there." Gods rot it, nothing was ever easy. Differential com was
suddenly getting another signal in the sputter of dust. "Chanur!
Go. ..." And a kif voice:
"Regrettable decision, Faha Captain." Pyanfar spat and gulped
air against the drag of g, vision tunneled with the stress and with
anger. Hour old signal, that from the Faha; at least an hour old,
maybe more than that. "Second ship,"
Tirun said. "3/4 by 32 our referent." "Get me Starchaser's
course," Pyanfar said. "Been trying,"
Haral said. "Bearing NSR station, best guess uncertain."
Figures leaped to the number two screen, a schematic covering a
quarter of Urtur's dust-barriered system, below them, system
referent. "Knnn ship,"
Hilfy said, "moving on the beeper. -- Aunt, they're going to
intercept it." Pyanfar hesitated half a
beat in turning, a glance at scan which flashed intercept probable on
that ship trailing them. Knnn, by the gods, knnn were moving on the
decoy, and they were not known for rescues. Something clenched on her
heart, instinctive loathing, and in the next beat she flung her
attention back toward the system schematic. No way to help the Faha.
None. Starchaser was on her own. Knnn had the decoy; kif were not
going to like that. If there ever had been knnn. More than The Pride
could play that dangerous game. The scream on the hull rose in pitch
--
"Screens," she
snapped at Haral. She reached for drive control, uncapped switches.
"Stand by. Going to throw our navigation all to blazes; I'll
keep Alijuun off our nose when we cycle back." She pulsed the
jump drive, once, twice, three times, microsecond darings of the
vanes. Her stomach lurched, pulse quickened until the blood congested
in her nose and behind her eyes, narrowing vision to a hazed
pinpoint. They were blind a third time, instruments robbed of
regained referents, velocity boosted in major increments. Dead, if
Haral failed them now. But they were old hands at Urtur, knew the
system, had a sense where they were even blinded, from a known start. Down the throat of the kif
s search pattern, from zenith ... she pulsed the vanes again, another
increment, swallowed hard against the dinner which was trying to come
up again. Differential com got them a kif howl, and a mahendo'sat
yammering distress. That, for whatever they
had done against Starchaser, skin their backsides for them, a
streaking search for a target. "Ai!" Haral
yelped, and instruments flared, near collision. "Chanur!"
she heard: the name would be infamy here as at Meetpoint. There were
surges and flares all over the board. She pulsed out and in again and
the instruments went manic. "Gods," Haral moaned, "I
almost had it." "Now, Haral! for the
gods' sake find it!" Instruments flickered and
screens static-mad sorted themselves, manifoldly offended. An alien
scream erupted from their own com. Tully, Pyanfar reckoned suddenly:
his drugs were not quick enough. They had betrayed him like the kif. Image appeared on her
number one screen: Alijuun. The star was sighted and bracketed and
the ID was positive. "Hail" she
yelled, purest relief, and hit the jump pulse for the long one. Her
voice wound in and out in a dozen colors, coiled and recoiled through
the lattices which opened for them, and the stomach-wrenching
sensation of jump swallowed them down. ...
VI . . . and spat them up
again, a dizzying percept of elsewhere. A shimmer before her eyes,
that was the screen, and the automated instruments were searching.
Keep conscious, don't go out, not now, keep the hand on controls. . .
. "Working," Haral's low voice drifted to her out of
infinity. "O gods." That was someone else. Hilfy? A star
came into brackets on the screen and wobbled out again. "Check
referent," Pyanfar said. Her blurring eyes sought instruments. A
red light was on. "Got a problem," Haral said, sending cold
chills along her back. "No positive ID on referent." "Brace." She
started aborting the proposed second jump, dumping speed sufficient
for the scanning sensors to make their fix. There was a moan near her
when the shift slammed in. Her hand shook like palsy over the
controls, hovering over the button. "Gods, we've missed,"
Haral moaned; and then Tirun: "Abort! we're vectored massward!" Dark mass was ahead of
them, the mass which had pulled them in from jump, coming up in their
faces. Sensors realized it: alarms went off, dinning through the
ship. Pyanfar dumped again, hard, flinched as screens went static and
one went dead. Something had given way. "Turning," she
warned the crew. The Pride veered in her next skip, and blood started
in Pyanfar's nose, internal organs and joints and flesh hauled in
independent motion. She spat and struggled with the muscles of her
eyes to keep focused, fought a strained muscle to keep her hand at
the controls. Scan showed hairbreadth miss now and she trimmed ship
and let it ride, hurtling for a virtual skim of the obstacle. A kif voice came in over
com. "Identify: urgent." Someone was waiting in this place,
stationed to guard, another of Akukkakk's long arms. "Aunt," Hilfy's
voice came weakly, bubbling liquid. "Kif. . ." "Got it."
Pyanfar sniffed blood or sweat, licked salt from her mouth, staring
at the screens which showed the dark mass hoving up at them . . .
tight skim, incredibly tight. Their own output was still knnn-song,
wailing up and down the scale, tickings and whines . . . that had to
put the kif off. Haral and Tirun talked frantically to each other,
searching with the sensors for their way out. "Got it!" Haral
exclaimed suddenly; a star showed up in the bracket. "Can't do it,"
Pyanfar said: the mass was too close. They had no choice now but to
skim past and hope. "Identify," the
kif voice insisted. Instruments flared of a
sudden, screens going static. "That was fire," Pyanfar said
to Hilfy, "onto our former vector, thank the gods." A second flaring: The
Pride had returned a shot, automatic response. Of a sudden the alarms
went again, crescendo of mechanical panic. "Mass proximity,"
Pyanfar said into allship, for those riding it out below. "We're
going to miss it." The solidity was there, a
sudden jump in every mass/drive instrument on the bridge, lights
flaring red, a static washout on the number four screen: Kita Point
mass, a chunk of rock, a cinder radiating only the dimmest warmth
into the dark, light-less, lonely, and far, far too big for The Pride
to drag with her into jump. . . . Vid picked up flares of
light, massive spots like the glow of a sun in that dark, illumining
the surface of Kita mass. Rock boosted in their field out of Urtur
had not changed vector. It hit the dark mass at near c, pyrotechnics
which flowered the dark. They passed in that flare
of impact, slingshotted with a wrench which brought a new flood of
blood to Pyanfar's throat . . . grayout . . . . . . back again. "Haral!" A frantic moment. "There!"
Then- referent was back in bracket. A kif voice clicked and chattered
out of phase with what they should be getting: that was then a second
ship, lying off Kita zenith. Fire hit them. Pyanfar slammed the drive
back in, with the howl of the kif in her ears, the static spit of
instruments trained on the chaos in their wake. She tried with all
her wits to keep oriented, a .slow reach of a sore arm while matter
came undone about them, while they were naked to the between and time
played games with the senses. No way that the kif could have
followed. They had run the gauntlet. They were through the worst.
After Kita it was one of three destinations and after the next, one
of two more; and the choices multiplied, and the kif had harder and
harder shift to bring numbers to bear against them. . . . "We're fading,"
Haral said, words which stretched through infinity, emotion-dulled,
nowhere: this was the way it went when ships lost themselves, when
they jumped and failed to come out again . . . perhaps some
mathematical limbo ... or straight into mahendo'sat hell, where
four-armed demons invented horrors . . . Pyanfar dragged her wits
together, watched for another such wobble. Damage they had taken
under fire could have done something to the vanes, robbed them of
capacity, might lose them permanently. . . . . . . second arrival, a
blurring downdrop of the senses into here and when again. Pyanfar
reached for the panel and ordered scan search. Differential com was
already getting signal: it was the marker of Kirdu System, wondrous,
beautiful mahendo'sat voice, the buoy of the jump range. "We're in!"
Hilfy cried. "We're in." "Clear and in the
range," Pyanfar said, smug. She hit the jump pulse to throw off
velocity and the smugness evaporated somewhat: the pulse was queasy,
less powerful than it ought to be. "Captain?"
Haral's voice. "I feel it." "Maintain knnn
output?" Hilfy asked. "Yes." Pyanfar
kept her eyes on the readout, hit the pulse again. "Plot entry
vector," she ordered Tirun. "We might have trailed some
debris with us." "Reckon we dumped
most of the rocks on Kita," Tirun muttered. She started sending
the schematic over, fired off a comp-signal warning for what good it
would do a slow ship in the path of their debris-attended entry. The
dump went on, sickly pulses which finally began to count. "That's better,"
Pyanfar said, swallowing against the stress. "Hilfy, got a lag
estimate?" "Approximate,"
Hilfy said in a thin voice. "Thirty-minute roundtrip to station,
estimate." Close, by the gods, too
close. Pyanfar kept the dump pulses going at the closest possible
intervals, kept her eyes nowhere but the center screen now, the
relayed scan from the station buoy which plotted the location of
ships and planets and large objects in the system. Automation had
added in the warning The Pride had sent out, a hazard zone in a cone
headed transzenith of system. "Getting refinement
on course," Haral said as a schematic came up on number two
screen. It took only a little bending: check velocity, the warning
kept flashing. Pyanfar coaxed another dump out of The Pride and made
the slight correction, her senses swimming now with the prolonged
strain of high-velocity reckonings, with stringing her mind along
those distances and speeds which the ship's own comp handled in
special conflict-dumping mode. "Down the slot!"
Tirun cried as the lines matched. They were dead on at last,
free and safe and headed down the approach path station had
preassigned the next incomer in that area of the range. Pyanfar
afforded herself a lighter breath, still with her eyes fixed on the
scan, trying to figure how much more they could dump and how fast.
Let one miner be where he ought not to be, let one skimmer have gone
off for some private reason without advising station in advance, some
idiot crossing the entry lanes, some mad knnn or chi, with whom there
was never any reasoning, navigation hazards wherever they operated. .
. . Sweat ran, or blood. She
sniffed and wiped at her nose, eyes still fixed and hand on the
button. They rode the odds; they came in like a shot, counting on
statistics and blind luck and traffic being exactly where it ought:
one could do that a few times in a lifetime and not run out of luck. "Acquiring station
signal," Hilfy said. "That's tc'a talking now, I think.
It's this knnn signal of ours. . . ." "Cut the signal. Give
station our proper ID. Relay pirate attack; damage and emergency, and
probable accompanying debris." "Got it," Hilfy
said. Pyanfar hit the dump
again, forced them a little more toward a sane speed, and a board
redlighted. She cycled in a backup. Haral unbelted and leaned
into the pit beside her console, frantic readjustments. There might be kif in dock
at Kirdu . . . gods, would be kif here, by all the odds, and just
possibly one of them had come through from Urtur. But this was Kirdu:
mahendo'sat here, in their own territory, had teeth, and took no
arguments from visitors. They would demand explanations for such an
entry. Gods grant whatever remaining debris they had boosted through
with them from Urtur found no mahendo'sat targets, or there would be
more than an explanation due. "Something's left
station," Tirun said. The image showed up on the number two
screen. Ships were outbound, four of them, one after the other,
moving on intercept, dopplering into their path. "Hilfy,"
Pyanfar said, "signal general alert, all hani ships insystem." "Done," Hilfy
said, moving to do it. Haral slid back into place, set to work in
haste at the comp. The number one screen started acquiring estimates,
locational shifts on the oncomers and everything else in the system.
That was station guard which had just put out, more than likely: The
Pride had broken regulations from entry to this moment, heaps and
piles of regulations. Some mangy mahe station official was likely
elbow deep in the rule books this moment hunting penalties, Pyanfar's
nose wrinkled at the thought of the fines, the levies, the arguments. "Getting signal on
the ships outcoming," Hilfy said. "They're mahendo'sat, all
right." "Huh." Pyanfar
blew a sigh of relief. Worse had been possible, worse indeed.
"Geran," she said over allship. "Chur. Are you getting
this down there? We're all right; station's ending us an escort." "Coming in clear,
captain." "Is everything secure
down there? How's Tully? Have you got a monitor on him?" "He's here in op with
us," Geran said. "Drugs are wearing off. He's muzzy but
following what's going on." "No more risks, rot
you; who cleared that? -- Take scan on number four for approach; give
us some relief up here; and get him secure." "I friend."
Tully's voice came back to her, hani words. And others, his own
tongue, a flood of words. "Shut him down," Pyanfar hissed;
and there was silence. "Working," Chur's voice reported,
and Tirun paused in her frantic pace, dropped her head into hands and
wiped them back over her mane. She took the chance for a drink, from
a plastic bottle from under-counter, passed it to Hilfy and then to
Tirun and then to Haral and Haral to Pyanfar. The remnant went down,
a welcome cooling draught. Pyanfar took the chance to call up comp to
locate the damage, gnawed her upper lip as the information came
through incomplete. She looked right, at the others, at Hilfy, who
was listening to something, with a bruised, exhausted look on her
face. "Shunt that below when they get the Outsider settled,"
Pyanfar said to her, and looked at Haral, who was still doing
updates. "Damage indeterminate," she said to Haral
privately. "I don't feel any lag in the insystem responses, at
least. It should be a normal dock, but we're going to have to get a
hurryup on that repair and I don't know how to the gods we're going
to finance the bribe." "Aunt," Hilfy
said, "station is on, wants to talk to you personally. I told
them -- " "Captain."
Lowerdeck overrode, sent up an image on scan. Ship in the jump range,
incoming, on their tail. "Gods," Pyanfar
hissed. "Gods rot all kif -- Hilfy: ID, fast." Hilfy hesitated half a
breath: Tirun was already overreaching a long arm onto her territory.
Wailing came through, and Pyanfar grimaced at the high-pitched
squeal. "Knnn," Tirun
said. "Captain, it's that rotted knnn." "We don't know it's
that knnn," Pyanfar spat back, snatching the mike -- waved an
angry gesture with it at Hilfy. "Station. Station, and get your
wits working, niece." The ready light came on.
"Go," Hilfy said, distraught and J wild-eyed, and subdued
the knnn pickup. "This is Kirdu
Station," the machine-translated voice came through. "We
mahe urgent severe protest this entry. Go slow, hani captain
incoming." "This is The Pride of
Chanur, Pyanfar Chanur speaking. We're incoming with an unidentified
on our tail and with damage, but we have maneuverability. The ship
behind us may pose a threat to station; I suggest your escort direct
its attention to what's following us." Com stayed dead, longer
than lagtime dictated. "Escort is passing
turnover point," Geran's quiet voice came from the other op
center. "Captain, they're going to pass us, going to go out and
look that bastard over." Pyanfar looked, saw,
returned her attention to comp, where new estimate was coming up on
the position of the incoming ship. It was close, moving hard, no dump
of speed. "Got a hani contact,"
said Hilfy. "Tahar." "Gods and thunders."
This was not a friendly house to Chanur. Pyanfar picked up the
contact on her board. "Tahar ship, this is Pyanfar Chanur. Stand
ready for trouble. Don't be caught at dock." "Chanur, this is Dur
Tahar. Is this your trouble?" "It has no patent,
Tahar, not so far. Stand out from station, I warn you. In case." "Chanur," the
translated voice of station broke in on them. "Tahar Captain.
Against regulation, this. "Use station channel. And this station
order stay. No moving out." "We're coming in,
station. We advise you ships are destroyed and lives lost. If that
ship back there is knnn, well; but if it isn't, Kirdu has trouble." Another voice, clicking
and harsh. Kif. "That's from a docked
ship," Hilfy said quickly. "Got it on station directional." "Captain." That
from Tirun. "Incomer's just begun dump; they're checking speed." Pyanfar blinked, the
suspicion of good news hitting dully on a dazed brain. She drew a
whole breath. "Gods grant it is knnn," she muttered.
"Station, you should be getting that now: we'll make a full
explanation as soon as we get in and get our mechanical problems in
order. We strongly urge you take full precautions and get a positive
visual on that so-named knnn arrival. We have serious charges to
lodge." Silence from station. They
were not, most likely, overjoyed. Pyanfar broke the contact.
"Bastards." She wiped her mouth, straightened her beard
with her fingers. "Cowards." The escort passed and headed
out to the incoming ship behind them. She settled back in her cushion
and listened to the reports. "Aunt," Hilfy
said finally, "mahendo'sat report visual confirmation: it is a
knnn ship." "Thank the gods,"
Pyanfar muttered, and threw open the restraint on her cushion, leaned
forward more comfortably. Station was coming up. A flurry of docking
instructions was arriving on the number three screen. Not kif behind them, only
a vastly confused knnn. She gave a wry pursing of the mouth,
imagining the chagrin of the odd creatures, who had arrived to far
more commotion than knnn were wont to stir under any circumstances.
Coincidence, perhaps; ships came and went from everywhere -- gods,
rare to have two ships come into a jump range that close, but not
that rare. Kirdu had a great deal more traffic than that generated by
The Pride. This was civilization, here at Kirdu, civilization, after
all. She drew a series of
quieter breaths. Watched the schematic which showed them the way
toward docking. Tired. Indeed she was tired. She ached in her bones.
It took a moral effort to settle in for docking maneuvers, to do it
by manual because she wanted the feel of it, not to be surprised by
some further malfunction under automatic. She was already mentally
sorting through possible arguments with the Tahar, a loan, anything
to get The Pride's repairs made and paid, to get out of this place:
they needed no more damages than they had, and most of all they did
not need prolonged residence here. If they were very, very
fortunate, the kif were sorting matters out with a certain knnn who
had picked up a bit of salvage at Urtur; and that knnn might not be
amused by a hani joke. The great hakkikt Akukkakk would be even less
amused . . . but he would have a hard time negotiating with the knnn
for a look at its prize; and a harder time with his fellow kif ..
indeed he would. She felt, in all, satisfied. But a knnn had happened
through jump with them; had happened to crowd them. Gods ... did they
have apparatus which made tracking possible? Its voice was back,
distant and eerie, like that which she had duplicated at Urtur, to
use a knnn voice as shield and disguise. Gods knew what message
they had been transmitting to knnn hearing: follow me? Help me?
Something far less friendly? Tc'a might know; but there
was no querying that side of Kirdu Station. They came up on dock,
moving in next the Tahar ship: Kirdu wanted its hani problems
collected, apparently, giving them berths next each other. In some
part that was good, because it gave them private access to talk
without witnesses; and in another part it was not, because it made
them one single target. "Where are the kif?"
she asked station bluntly, stalling on the approach. "I'm not
putting my nose into station until I know what berths they have." "Number twenty and
twenty-one," station informed her. "Mahe and stsho in the
between numbers, no trouble, no trouble, hani captain. You make easy
dock, please." She wrinkled her nose and
committed them, not without contrary thoughts.
VII The Pride's nose went
gently into dock, the grapples clanged to and accesses thumped open,
and Pyanfar thrust back from the panel with a sudden watery feeling
about the joints. Station chattered at them, requests for routine
cooperations. "Shut down," she said curtly, waved a weary
signal at Haral and pushed the cushion round the slight bit it could
go. "Hilfy: tell station offices. Tell them we've got some
shakeup. I'll talk with them when we get internal business settled." "Aye," Hilfy
murmured, and relayed the message, with much flicking of the ears in
talking with the official and a final flattening of them. Pyanfar
shortened her focus, on Tirun, who was running her last few checks.
Her hands made small uncertain movements; her ears were drooping.
"Tirun," Pyanfar said, and Tirun's face when she looked
around showed the strain. "Out," Pyanfar said. "Now." Tirun stared at her half a
moment, and ordinarily Tirun would have mustered argument. She looked
only numb, and pushed back from her place and tried, a faltering
effort which got her to her feet, and a reach which got her to the
next console. They all scrambled for her, but Hilfy was quickest,
flung an arm about her. "She goes to quarters," Pyanfar
said. "Aye," Haral said, and took charge from Hilfy,
replacing Tirun's support on that side. Hilfy stood a moment.
Pyanfar looked on her back, on the backs of Tirun and Haral as Tirun
limped away trying not to limp; and Hilfy straightened her shoulders
and looked back. "I'll stay on the
com," Hilfy offered. "Leave it. Let
station wonder. Clean up." Hilfy nodded stiffly,
turned and walked out, quite, quite without swagger, with a hand to
steady her against the curvature-feeling of the deck when they were
docked. It occurred to Pyanfar then that Hilfy had not been sick, not
this time. Pyanfar drew a deep breath, let it go, turned and leaned
over the com. "Lowerdeck, who's at station?" "Geran," the
voice came back. "All stable below." "Clean up. Above all
get Tully straightened up and presentable." "Understood." Pyanfar broke the
connection. There was another call coming over com. "Chanur, this is
Tahar's Moon Rising. Private conference." "Tahar, this is
Pyanfar Chanur: we have a medical situation in progress. Stand by
that conference." "Do you require
assistance, Pride of Chanur?" There was, infinitesimal
in the tone,, satisfaction in that possibility. Pyanfar sweetened her
voice with prodigious effort. "Hardly, Moon Rising. I'll return
the call at the earliest possible. Chanur's respects, Tahar. Out." She broke off with
abruptness, pushed back and strode off, without swagger in her stride
either. All her joints seemed rearranged, her head sitting
precariously throbbing on a body which complained of abuses. Her nape
bristled, not at kif presence, but at an enemy who sat much closer to
home. Gods. Beg of the Tahar? Of a house which had
presented formidable threat to Chanur during Kohan's holding? The
satisfaction in the Tahar whelp's voice hardly surprised her. It was
a spectacle, The Pride with her gut missing and her tail singed.
There would be hissing laughter in Tahar, the vid image carried home
for the edification of Kahi Tahar and his mates and daughters. And from Tahar it would go
out over Anuurn, so that it would be sure to come to Kohan. There
would be challenges over this, beyond doubt there would be
challenges. Some Tahar whelp would get his neck broken before the
dust settled, indeed he would: young males were always optimists,
always ready to set off at the smell of advantage, the least edge it
might afford them. They would try. So. They
had done that before. That was what Dur Tahar
had wind of.
"She's well enough,"
Haral reported at the door of the crew's quarters on the lower deck.
Pyanfar looked beyond and saw Tirun snugged down in bed and oblivious
to it all. "Leg swelled a bit under the stress, but no worry." Pyanfar frowned. "Good
medical facilities here onstation. But it might be we'd have to pull
out abruptly; I don't want to risk leaving any of us behind for a
layover, not... under the circumstances." "No," Haral
agreed. "No need for that. But we're wearing thin, captain." "I know," she
said. "You too, begging
your leave." "Huh." She laid
her hand on Haral's shoulders. Walked away to the lift, paused there
and listened in the direction of Chur and Geran's post. She walked
back that way and leaned in at the door of op, where Geran sat watch,
washed and in clean blue trousers, but looking on the world with the
dull look someone ought to have who had gone from one on-shift to the
next without sleep. "Right," Pyanfar said simply, recalling
that she had given them orders they were following, and leaned an arm
against the doorframe. "Tully made it all right down here, did
he?" "No trouble from
him." "I'm going to have to
take him up on that work offer. You and Chur trade off with him, one
on and one off. Tirun's ailing." "Bad?" "G stress didn't
favor that leg. We'll rest here as much as we can. I'm going to see
what charity I can get out of Tahar. Need to find out what damage
we've got, first off." "Got a remote on it,"
Geran said, turned about and called it up on the nearest screen.
Pyanfar came into the room, looked at the exterior camera image,
which was from the observation blister, and suffered a physical pang
at the sight. Number one vane had a mooring line snaking loose,
drifting about under station's rotation, and there were panels
missing, dark spots on the long silver bar. "That was our fade,"
Pyanfar said with a belated chill. "Gods. Could have lost it all
coming in with that loose. Going to take a skimmer crew to get that
linked back up, no way the six of us can do it." "Money," Geran
said dismally. "Might have to sell one of us to the kif after
all." "Bad joke,"
Pyanfar said, and walked out. Tully, she had thought,
with an impulse of which she was heartily ashamed. But she kept thinking of
it, all the way up to her own quarters. She stripped and showered,
shed a mass of fur into the drain; dried and combed and arranged her
mane and beard. It was the red silk breeches this time, the gold
armlet, the pendant pearl. She surveyed herself with some
satisfaction, a lift in her spirits. Appearances meant something,
after all. The mahendo'sat were sensitive to the matter, quite as
much as the stsho. Offended prosperity, that
was the tack to take with them. They knew The Pride. As long as it
seemed that Chanur's fortunes were intact and that Chanur was still a
power to reckon with among hani, that long they might hold some hope
of mahendo'sat eagerness to serve. And there was, she
reckoned, smiling coldly at the splendid hani captain in the mirror,
there was deadly earnest in this haste. There was Akukkakk. Gods rot it all. Possibly she had
embarrassed him enough that his own would turn on him. That would
take time to know. A long time out from homeport, keeping her ear
alert for rumor. Get rid of the Outsider
Tully . . . would that the disentanglement were that easy. She stared into her own
eyes, ears flat, and meditated the villainy that any trader seeing
the Outsider would think on naturally as breathing; and after a
little thinking her lips pursed in a grimly smug smile. So, so, so, Pyanfar
Chanur. There was a way to settle more than one problem. Likely Tully
would not like it, but an Outsider who came begging passage could
take what he could get, and it was not in her mind to beg from Tahar. She checked com, found the
expected clutter of messages waiting attention. "Nothing really
urgent," Geran said. "Station's still upset, that's the sum
of them." "Chur's got Tully,
has she, cleaning him up?" "A little problem
there." "Don't tell me
problem. I've got problems. What problem?" "He has his own
ideas, our Tully does. He wants to be shaved." "Gods and thunders.
Washroom?" "Here, now." "I'm coming down
there." She started for the door,
went back and picked up the audio plug for the translator and headed
down in haste. Shaved. Her ears flattened, pricked again in a forced
reckoning that customs were customs. But appearances, by the
gods. . . . She arrived in op in
deliberate haste, found the trio there, Geran, Chur, Tully, all
cleanly and haggard and drowning their miseries in a round of gfi.
They looked up, Tully most anxious of all, still possessed, thank the
gods, of all his mane and beard and decent-looking in a fresh pair of
trousers. "Pyanfar," he
said, rising. "Captain," she
corrected him sternly. "You want what, Tully? What problem?" "Wants the clippers,"
Chur said. "I trimmed him up a bit." She had. It was a good
job. "He wants the beard off." "Huh. No, Tully.
Wrong." Tully sank down again, the
cup of gfi in his two hands, looked chagrined. "Wrong." Pyanfar heaved a sigh.
"That's reasonable. You do what I say, Tully. You have to look
right for the mahendo'sat. You look good. Fine." "Same # hani." "Like hani, yes." "Mahendo'sat. Here." "You're safe. It's
all right. Friendly folk." Tully's mouth tightened
thoughtfully. He nodded peaceably enough. Then he reached a hand
behind his head and knotted the pale mane back in his fingers.
"Right, that?" "No," Pyanfar
said. The hand .dropped. "I do all you say." Pyanfar flicked her ears,
thrust her hands into her waistband. "Do all?" She felt
pricklish in the area of her honor, and the Outsider's pale eyes
gazed up at her with disturbing confidence. "It might frighten
you, what I want. I might ask too much." Some of that got through.
The confidence visibly diminished. "I make you afraid,
Tully?" She gestured wide, toward the bow. "There's a
station out there, Kirdu Station. Mahendo'sat species is the
authority in this place. There's a hani ship docked next to us. Stsho
species too, down the dock." "Kif?" "Two kif ships, not
the same ones. Not Akukkakk's, not likely. Traders. They're trouble
if we linger here too long, but they won't make any sudden move. I
want you to go outside, Tully. I want you to come with me, out in the
open, on station dock, and meet the mahendo'sat." He did understand. A
muscle jerked in his jaw. "I'm crew of this ship," he said.
It seemed a question. "Yes. I won't leave
you here. You stay with me." "I come," he
said. That simply. She stared at
him a moment, deliberately held out her hand toward the cup in his.
He looked perplexed for a moment, then surrendered it to her. She
drank, subduing a certain shudder, handed it back to him, He drank as well, glanced
at her, measuring her reaction by that look, finished the cup. No
prejudices. No squeamishness about other species. She nodded
approval. "Go with you,
captain," Chur offered. "Come on, then,"
Pyanfar said. "Geran, you stay; can't leave the ship with no one
watching things, and the others are off. We're going just to station
offices and back, and it shouldn't be trouble. I don't expect it, at
least." "Right," Geran
said, not without a worried look. Pyanfar put a hand on
Tully's shoulder, realized the chill of his skin, the perpetually
hunched posture when he was sitting. He stood up, shivered a bit.
"Tully. The translator won't work outside the ship, understand.
Once out the rampway, we can't understand each other. So I tell you
here: you stay with me; you don't leave me; you do all that I say." "Go to the offices." "Offices, right."
She laid one sharpclawed fingertip amid his chest. "I'll try to
get it through to you, my friend. If we go about with you aboard in
secret, if we leave mahendo'sat territory with you and go on to
Anuurn, to our own world -- that could be trouble. Mahendo'sat might
think we kept something they should have known about. So we make you
public, let them all have a look at you, mahendo'sat, stsho, yes,
even the kif. You wear clothes, you talk some hani words, you get
yourself registered, proper papers, all the things a good civilized
being needs to be a legal entity in the Compact. I'll get it all
arranged for you. There's no way after you have those papers that
anyone can claim you're not a sapient. I'll register you as part of
my crew. I'll give you a paper and where I tell you, you put your
name on it. And you don't give me any trouble. Does enough of that
get through? It's the last thing I can tell you." "Don't understand
all. You ask. I do it." She wrinkled her nose,
threw an impatient wave of her hand at Chur. "Come on." Chur came. Tully did,
blindly trusting, at which she scowled and walked along in front of
them both to the lock, hands thrust into the back of her waistband,
wondering whether station offices had detectors and whether they
could get away with a concealed weapon, going where they were going.
She decided against it, whatever the other risks.
A watcher stood by the
rampway outside, a mahe dock-worker who scampered off quickly enough
when they showed outside, and who probably made a call to his
superiors . . . the mahendo'sat were discreetly perturbed, polite in
their surveillance. But they were there. Pyanfar saw it, and Chur
did; and Tully turned a frightened look toward the sudden movement.
He talked at them, but the translator was helpless now, outside the
range of the inship pickup, and Pyanfar laid a reassuring hand on his
shoulder and kept him moving. "Just a precaution," she
said, a quiet tone, and looked beyond to the rampway access of Moon
Rising, where a far more hazardous watcher stood, a hani crewwoman. "Better take care of
that business," Pyanfar said to Chur, and diverted heir course
diagonally among the canister-carriers toward Moon Rising. Another hani showed up
outside, on the run: second crewwoman, doubled reflection of the
other, same wide stance and steady stare. At a certain distance
Pyanfar stopped, and waited, and made a subtle sign to Chur, who
strode forward to meet the others. There was an exchange too
quiet for her ears ... no friendliness in the postures, but no overt
unpleasantness. Chur came back, not in haste, not delaying any
either, ears flat. "Their captain's
asleep," Chur reported. "She proposes to come aboard The
Pride when her nap's done. Answer, captain?" "Why should I? I
wasn't advised. But I may let her come. It suits me." She turned
without a glance at the others, put a hand on Tully's hairless back
and steered him away with them. And if the Tahar captain
was in fact sleeping, she would not be by the time those two rag-ears
got back inside, to report the Chanur captain had a companion of
unknown species, headed for station offices. The Tahar had gotten
caught in their own arrogance, and Chanur failed to rise to the
insult, simply walked off. Pyanfar threw a little swagger into the
departure, for the Tahar and for the gaping mahe dockworkers, some of
whom fled in haste to report to superiors or to gather comrades, a
dark-furred and scantly clad crowd. "They noticed,"
Chur said. "That they have."
Pyanfar locked her hands behind her and they strolled along in
company, one tall hani captain in scarlet, one smallish hani
crewwoman in roughspun(blue, and improbably between them, a towering
wide-shouldered Outsider with naked skin and a beautiful golden mane,
excruciatingly conspicuous. Pyanfar suffered an irrepressible rush of
the blood, a tightening of the lips as a crowd began to gather, far
more people than those who worked the docks. Mahendo'sat, dockers and
merchanters and miners and gods knew what else; and a scatter of
stsho, pale and pastel among the crowd, their whitish eyes round as
moons, holding each others' hands and chattering together in shock.
Of the kif . . . no sign as yet, but the rumor would draw them, she
was well sure of that, and wished in that regard that she had that
gun she had thought of taking. They, reached the lift,
pushed the button, mahe giving way about them and crowding back again
at every opportunity, a roar of crowd-noise about them. "Captain,"
someone asked, one of the mahendo'sat. "What is this being?" She turned about with a
grin which lacked all patience, and mahendo'sat who knew hani backed
up, but there was humor in it too, satisfaction at the turmoil. The
lift arrived, and a half dozen startled mahe decided to vacate it,
whether or not they had planned on getting out on this level. They
edged out the door in haste and Pyanfar seized Tully by the arm and
put him inside. Chur delayed while she stepped in, and came last,
lacing the crowd. The door delayed, time enough for anyone else who
thought they wanted to ride up with them, but no one entered. The
door closed, and the lift shot upward. Pyanfar let go of Tully's arm
and put her hand on his back, ready to indicate to him to move out.
He was sweating despite the chill in the air. On the other side of him
Chur patted his arm. The lift stopped once. Those waiting decided
against entering, eyes wide; and the lift went on up. "Friend," Tully
said nervously, out of his scant hani repertoire. "Mahendo'sat and
stsho," Pyanfar said. "Friend. Yes." The car stopped a second
time, a quieter corridor in the office complex. Tully walked with
them, out and down the hall, startling other mahe workers. And stopped, abruptly. A
kif came from the offices ahead, stopped and stared, anonymous in
gray robes and doleful kifish face. Pyanfar seized Tully's arm,
pulled the claws in when he winced, but the sting got him moving.
They passed the kif and the kif turned; Pyanfar did not react to it,
but Chur, crew and unburdened with captaincy, faced about with ears
flat and a snarl on her face. Likely the kif kept staring. Pyanfar
whisked Tully through the welcome office doors ahead and only then
turned to cast a look back; but the kif was on its way, robes aswirl
in its haste, and Chur, ears still flat, joined them inside the
registry office. Tully smelled of sweat. Veins stood out in his arms.
Pyanfar patted his shoulder and looked round the gaudy colored room
at a frozen officeful of mahendo'sat, most standing. "I'm Pyanfar Chanur.
You requested an interview." There was a general
flutter, the foremost of the officials dithering about letting them
through the general registry area to the more secluded complex behind
the doors, with a dozen looks at Tully in the process. "Come along,"
Pyanfar urged him softly, keeping a hand on his elbow, and now she
sweated, reckoning the shocks Tully had endured thus far, a kif in
the hall, close spaces . . . one irrational moment and he could bolt;
or strike at someone -- "Friend," she said, and he stayed
by her. The official let them
through into a luxurious waiting area, thick carpet and pillowlike
couches in bright colors, hastened about providing them refreshment
as they settled on a facing group of couches. "Sit, sit,"
Pyanfar said, providing Tully the example, legs tucked and ankles
crossed, and Chur waited until Tully had settled nervously on the
facing couch. Chur sank down in relief. The official set the
welcoming tray on a portable table in their midst. His dark mahe eyes
were alive with curiosity. "Beg understanding, hani captain . .
. this is -- passenger?" "Crew," Pyanfar
said with a prim pursing of the lips. She accepted the glass the
squatting mahe filled, two-handed mahe style in her holding of it;
and saw to her satisfaction that the mahe had in fact provided three
glasses. He filled the second and gave it to Chur, whose manners were
impeccable, and with some diffidence, offered to Tully. Tully took his after the
same fashion, keen mimic. Pyanfar smiled to herself and smothered the
smile in a sip of mahendo'sat liquor. The official pattered out with
effusive and anxious bows, leaving them alone; and whatever Tully
thought of the liquor he had the self-possession not to flinch from
it. "Friend," Tully
said again, looking worried. Chur, beside him, put a hand on his knee
and he seemed to take reassurance from that. Panic, not quite, but
his skin glistened with sweat, his muscles were taut. Steps sounded
just outside the door at the side of the room and he would have
looked around, but Chur patted his knee and he refrained. The door opened. A handful
of mahendo'sat, important with elaborate bright kilts and collars,
came in on them, one of them attended by a small brown and white
fluff which scurried about the floor at its feet and bristled at the
scent of hani. It hissed and had to be scooped up in the official's
arms; and Pyanfar kept a wary eye on it all the same, rising in
respect to the visitors. Chur and Tully followed her lead, and she
bowed and suffered the mahendo'sat's frankly appraising stare at
Tully. They chattered among themselves, no little disturbed, and some
of that she caught, exclamations of curiosity: the fluff growled, and
its owner -- an elderly mahe whose dark fur was graying and whose
flat face had all the other attributes of age -- looked toward her
with a lowering of the ears. "Chanur captain?" "The same. Have I the
honor to know you?" "Ahe Stasteburana-to,
I." The stationmaster in
person. She made another bow, and the stationmaster did the same,
keeping the equilibrium of the pampered creature in his arms,
soothing its growls unsuccessfully as he straightened again. And with
apparent distraction Stasteburana strolled off, while another of the
company made a stiffer bow and launched into them. "You pay,
Chanur captain, fines for reckless approach. Fines for bring debris
boosted through, danger to all innocent. Fines for reckless haste
near station. For bring hazardous situation." "I spit at your
charges. I dumped the debris at Kita and warned you only in the
remote chance there was still some with me, dumped it, I might add,
and sustained damage protecting your worthless station from injury.
As for fines, you're brigands, bloodsuckers, to prey off a friendly
ship with a long-standing account at this station, when for the
preservation of our lives and the protection of the Compact we had to
come in for shelter against piracy. A hani, a hani, mind, asks
shelter, and when have we ever done such a thing? Are you blind and
deaf as well as greedy?" "We have outrage. We
have knnn act crazy out there. We have report -- " The Personage Stasteburana
held up his aged and manicured hand. His Voice silenced herself and
broke off with a bow, while Stasteburana strolled back, stroking his
ball of fluff, which had never ceased to growl. "You make large
commotion, honorable Chanur, great hani captain, yes, we know you --
long time absent; maybe trade our rival Ajir, but we know you. Good
friend, we. Maybe make deal on fines. But serious matter. Where come
from?" "Meetpoint and Urtur
via Kita, wise mahe." "With this?" An
ears-flat look at Tully. "An unfortunate. A
being of great sensitivity, wise and gentle mahe. His ship was
wrecked, his companions gone . . . he cast himself on my charity and
proves of considerable value." "Value, hani,
captain?" "He needs papers,
wise mahe, and my ship needs repairs." Again Stasteburana walked
away, aloof from the Voice. "Your ship got no cargo," the
Voice spat. "You come empty hand, make big trouble here. You
near ask credit, hani captain; what credit? We make you fines, you
send Anuurn get cargo, maybe two, three hani ship pay off damages.
You got us knnn. You got us kif. We know this. You go talk hani at
next berth, ask she pay your fines." "Trivial. I have
cargo, better than Moon Rising. I make you a deal, indeed I shall, in
spite of your uncivilized behavior. I make a deal all mahendo'sat
will want." The Voice looked at Tully,
and the Personage turned about, moved in with a leisurely grace,
handed the small noisy animal to the Voice, and frowned. Stasteburana
made a further sign to his other three companions, and one of them
called to someone in the hall. It was not easy to make
distinctions of mahendo'sat of the same age and sex and build; but
about the large and relatively plain fellow who answered that summons
. . . there was an instant and queasy familiarity -- particularly
when he flashed a broad gilt-edged smile. Pyanfar sucked in her
breath and tucked her hands behind her, pulling the claws back in. "Captain Ana
Ismehanan-min of the freighter Mahijiru," Stasteburana said
softly. "Acquaintance to you, yes." "Indeed,"
Pyanfar said, and bowed, which gesture Gold-tooth returned with a
flourish. ' "This kif business,"
said Stasteburana, folding his wrinkled hands at his middle.
"Explain, hani Captain." "Who am I to know
what a kif thinks? They let this unfortunate being slip their fingers
and expected me to sell him back, plainly illegal. Then they attacked
a hani ship which was Completely ignorant of the
matter. A Handur ship was completely destroyed unless the captain of
Mahijiru has better news." "No good news,"
Goldtooth agreed sadly. "All lost, hani captain. All. I get away
quick, come here tell story my port." The Personage turned and
tapped Goldtooth on the shoulder, spoke to him in one of those
obscure mahen languages outside her reckoning. Goldtooth bowed
profoundly and backed aside, and Pyanfar looked warily at the
Personage. "You know," she said, to recover the initiative,
"what the kif wanted; and you know that there's no chance of
hiding such a prize, not here, not on Anuurn either. No good hiding
it at all." "I make you -- "
There was a beep from someone's pager. A voice followed, and one of
the attendants came forward in consternation, offered the instrument
to the hand of the Personage Stasteburana. There was talk of knnn:
that much past the local dialect; and the Personage's dark eyes grew
wider. "Where is it?" Pyanfar caught that much of the
conversation, and saw distress among the others. "You come,"
said Stasteburana himself, not using his Voice for instruction, and
swept a gesture to the doorway from which the mahendo'sat had come
into the room. "Come," Pyanfar
echoed to Chur and Tully, and walked along amid the mahe, the
attendants and the Voice and the captain of Mahijiru, all in the wake
of the Personage, who was-hastening with some evident alarm. The corridor debouched on
an operations center. Technicians in the aisles melted aside for the
Personage and his entourage. The Voice hissed orders, and the fluff
hissed too, in general menace. On the air a tc'a spoke, a sound like
static bursts and clicking. "Screen,"
Stasteburana ordered in his own tongue. The main screen livened in
front of them, meters wide and showing a dimly lit dockside. Blues
and violets, a horrid light, like nightmare, and a scuttling shape
like a snarl of hair possessed of an indefinite number of thin black
legs. It darted this I way and that, dragging with it, clutched in
jaws -- appendages-- under the hair? -- something which glittered
with metal and had the look of a long-limbed hani body. With a sinking feeling
Pyanfar recognized it. It was a good J bet that Chur and Tully did,
who had conspired in its construction. "That's a knnn,"
Pyanfar said to Tully. He said something I back, short and unhappy.
On the screen the creature scurried I this way and that with its
burden, eluding the attempts of writhing shapes in the shadows which
tried to deal with it: those were tc'a. Something stiltlike joined
the commotion, darted at the flitting knnn and tugged at the prize,
skittered off again. CM, by the gods: those manic beggars; the limbs
glowed phosphorescent yellow, left confusing trails on the screen in
its haste. Of a sudden a pair of tc'a
writhed into the knnn's way, physically dispossessed the knnn of its
burden; and the knnn darted about the harder, wailing with rage or
distress or simply trying to communicate. The scene was complete
chaos; and suddenly more knnn poured in. The solitary chi fled, a
blur of yellow-glowing sticks; and in the mahendo'sat control center,
technicians who had been seated stood up to watch what had become
riot. Hisses and clicks and wails came from the audio. The knnn began
to give ground, a phalanx of hairy snarled masses. Suddenly one darted
forward, seized one of the leathery, serpent-shaped tc'a and dragged
it off into their retreating line. There was a frantic hissing and
clicking from the mass of tc'a; but apart from a milling about, a
writhing and twining of dozens of serpentine bodies like so many
fingers lacing and unlacing in distress . . . nothing Not the least
attempt at counterattack or rescue. Pyanfar watched the kidnapping
with her ears laid back. So the knnn had traded,
after its fashion, darted onto station and laid down its offered
goods -- made off with something it took for fair; and now another
species had descended to trading in sapients. "What is it?" a
mahe asked distressedly, and fell silent. The main body of the tc'a
managed to drag the knnn's trade goods along, a grotesque flailing of
suited arms and legs. A communication came through, and a technician
approached the Personage Stasteburana. "Hani-make eva-pod,"
that one said, and Stasteburana turned a disturbed glance on Pyanfar,
who lifted her ears and assumed her most careless expression. "I shouldn't want to
disturb you," Pyanfar said. "All you'll find in that suit,
wise mahe, is a very spoiled lot of meat from our locker; I'd advise
you take decontamination precautions before taking that pod helmet
off." "What you do?"
Stasteburana spoke in anger without his Voice, and waved his Voice
off when she attempted to intervene. "What you do, Chanur
captain?" "The knnn seems to
have intercepted a gift of mine meant for the kif. It's confused, I'm
sure. Probably it'll return the tc'a. -- It was, at the time, a
matter of necessity, revered mahe." "Necessity!" "Only spoiled food, I
assure you. Nothing more. -- We were on the point of discussing
repairs to my ship . . . which are urgent. You'll not want me sitting
at your dock any longer than you have to. Ask the honest captain of
Mahijiru." "Outrage!" the
Voice proclaimed. "Extortion!" "Shall we discuss the
matter?" The fluffball suffered
another transfer, to the nearest of the dignitaries, and the Voice
looked to be preparing for verbal combat; but the Personage lifted a
placid and silencing hand, motioned the group back down the corridor,
delaying to give an instruction regarding the tc'a. Then the
Personage led the way back into the comfortable room down the
corridor. "Profit,"
Pyanfar said quickly and soothingly when the elder mahe and his
entourage turned to face her and hers. "Trouble first with
kif and now with knnn and with tc'a. Deceptions and hazards to this
station." "A new species,
revered mahe. That's the prize that has the kif disturbed. They see
the hope of profit the like of which they've not known before; and I
have the sole surviving member of his company, a spacefaring people,
communicative, civilized, wise mahe, and fit to tilt the balance of
the Compact. This was the prize at Meetpoint. This was the reason of
the loss of the Handur ship, and this was the part of my cargo I
refused to jettison. Surely we agree, revered mahe, what the kif
meant to do if they had gotten this information first. Shall I tell
you more of my suspicions . . . that the stsho knew something about
what was going on? That kif meant to annex a large portion of
adjacent space . . . having intimidated the stsho? That having done
so, they would then be in a position to expand their operations and
rearrange the map of the Compact to suit themselves -- an acquisition
from which the other members of the Compact would be positionally
excluded; only the stsho . . . who would lick the kif s feet. And
what future for the Compact then? What of this Compact which holds
all of our very profitable trade together? What of the balance of
things? But I shall tell you what I have: a tape, a tape, my good, my
great and farsighted mahe elder, for a symbol translator. ... a tape
which the kif spent sapient lives to obtain and failed to get. We
aren't selfish; I make this tape available to mahendo'sat as freely
as hani, in the interests of spreading this knowledge as far as
possible among likeminded people. But I want my ship repaired, the
fines forgotten, the assurance that Chanur will continue in the
friendship of this great and powerful station." The Personage laid his
ears back, his eyes dilated. He turned away, leaving his Voice to
face the matter. "Where come this creature? How we know sapient?
How we know friendly?" "Tully," Pyanfar
said, and put a hand on his arm and drew him forward. "Tully,
this is the Voice of the stationmaster . . friend, Tully." For a terrible moment that
arm was tense, as if Tully might bolt. "Friend," he said
then obediently. The Voice frowned, peered this way and that at
Tully's face ... on a level with the mahe's own. "Speak hani?"
the Voice asked. "I go on Pyanfar
ship. Friend." Gods. A sentence. Pyanfar
squeezed the arm and put him protectively behind her. The Voice
frowned; and behind the Voice the Personage had turned back with
interest. "You bring this trouble to us,"
Stasteburana said. "And knnn . . . why knnn?" "A resident of Urtur.
I claim no understanding of knnn. It's become disturbed . . . but not
of my doing, noble mahe. The safest thing for Kirdu Station in all
events is to have me safely on my way . . . and to have that, I fear,
there's a matter of certain essential repairs -- " The elder flared his
nostrils and puffed breaths back and forth. He consulted with his
Voice, who spoke to him rapidly involving kif and knnn. The Personage
turned back yet again. "This tape deal -- " " -- key to another
species, revered mahe. Mahendo'sat will have access to this
development; meet ships of this kind -- assured peaceful meeting,
full communication. And mind, you deal with no stranger, no one who
will cheat you and be gone. Chanur expects to be back at Kirdu in the
future, expects -- may I speak to you in confidence -- to develop
this new find." Stasteburana cast a
nervous glance at Tully. "And what you find, a? Find trouble.
Make trouble." "Are you willing to
have the kif do the moving and the growing and the getting? They
assuredly will, good mahe, if we don't." The Personage made nervous
moves of his hands, walked to the one of his companions who held the
angry ball of fluff and took it back, stroking it and talking to it
softly. He looked up. "Repairs begin," Stasteburana said,
and walked near Tully, who stood his ground despite the growling
creature in the mahe's arms. The growling grew louder. The mahe stood
and stared a long moment, gave a visible twitch of the skin of his
shoulders and lifted a hand from his pet to sign to his Voice. "Make
papers this sapient being. Make repairs. All hani go. Go away."
He looked suddenly at Pyanfar. "But you give tape. We say
nothing to kif." "Wise mahe,"
Pyanfar said with all her grace, and bowed. The Personage waggled
fingers and dismissed them in the company of the Voice, and the fluff
growled at their backs.
So, Pyanfar thought, as
they delayed at the desks outside, as nervous mahendo'sat officials
went through the mechanics of identifications with Tully. So they had
promises. She kept her ears up, her expression pleasant, and smiled
with extraordinary goodwill at the deskdwellers. Chur kept her hand
hovering near Tully's arm, at his back, constantly reassuring him at
this and that step, answering for him, keeping him calm when they
wanted his picture, urging him to sign where appropriate. Pyanfar
craned forward, got a glimpse of a signature of intricate regularity
which could not be an illiterate's mark in anyone's eyes. "Good," she
said, patted Tully on the shoulder as the document went back into the
hands of mahendo'sat officials -- looked about again, nose wrinkling
to a scent of perfume, for two stsho had just come into the offices.
They stood there with their jeweled pallor looking out of place in
mahendo'sat massive architecture, the huge blocky desks and the
garish colors. Moonstone eyes stared unabashedly at Tully and at
them. Capacious stsho brains stored up a wealth of detail for gossip,
which stsho traded like other commodities. Pyanfar bared her teeth at
them and they wisely came no closer. The papers came back,
plasticized and permanent, with Tully's face staring back from them,
species handwritten, classification general spacer semiskilled, sex
male, and most of the other circles unfilled. The official gave the
folder to Pyanfar. She gave it to Tully, clapped him on the shoulder,
faced him about and headed him for the door, past the gawking stsho. Elsewhere, she trusted,
orders were being passed which would get a repair skimmer prioritied
for The Pride. The mahendo'sat's prime concern had become getting rid
of them at utmost speed: she did not doubt it. There would be a mahe
official demanding that tape before all was done: that was beyond
doubt too. There would be some little quibble which came first,
repairs or tape; repairs, she was determined. The mahe had little
choice. They walked the corridor
to the right from the office doorway, toward the lift, the three of
them, past occasional mahendo'sat office workers and business folk
who either found reason to duck back into their doorways or anxiously
tried to ignore them. But the three who waited
before them at the lift. . . Pyanfar stopped half a step, made it a
wider one. "You," she said, striding forward, and the
foremost mahe stood out from his two companions, gilt teeth hidden in
a black scowl. "Bring trouble, you,"
said the captain of Mahijiru. "How you live, mahe?
A? Sell information every port you touch?" "My port, Kirdu. You
make trouble." "Huh. Trouble found
me. Got crew shot getting you your rotted welders to keep our deal.
Do I say anything about pearls you owe me? No. I give you a gift,
brave mahe. I ask no return." Goldtooth frowned the
more, looked at Chur and walked closer to Tully, tilted his round
chin and looked Tully up and down, but kept his hands off him. Then
he threw a glance at Pyanfar. "This you pick up on the dock." "You ask questions
for the Personage? Same you gather information at Meetpoint?" For the first time the
mahe flashed that sharpedged gold grin. "You clever, hani
captain." "You know this
Akukkakk." The grin died, leaving
deadly seriousness. "Maybe." "You really merchant,
mahe captain?" "Long time, honest
hani. Mahijiru longtime merchant ship, me, my crew, longtime
merchanter, sons and daughters mer-chanters. But we know this
Hinukku, yes. Longtime bad trouble." Pyanfar looked into that
broad dark face and wrinkled her nose. "Swear to you, mahe
captain -- I didn't think to bring trouble down on you. I give you
the trade goods, make no claim for return. You saved our hides, put
us onto that kif bastard. Owe you plenty for that." The mahe frowned. "Deal,
hani. They make you repair, you get quick leave . . . danger. Tell
you that free." "Mahijiru took no
damage getting out of Meetpoint?" "Small damage. You
take advice, hani." "I take it." She
pressed the lift button, took a second look, to remember the face of
this mahe beyond doubt. "Come," she said as the lift
arrived empty. She shepherded Chur and Tully through the door and
turned once inside. Goldtooth/ Ismehanan and his companions showed no
inclination to go with them. The door closed between and the lift
started down. She looked back, at Tully and at Chur, and gathered
Tully by the elbow as the car, unstopped this time by other
passengers, made the whole trip down and let them out on the docks. The crowd had dispersed
somewhat, thank the gods; but not enough. It gathered quickly enough
as they crossed the dock, and Pyanfar watched on all sides, flicking
quick glances this way and that, reckoning that by now, trouble had
time to have organized itself. And it was there. Kif --
by the gantries, watching. That presence did not at all surprise her.
Tully failed to spot them, seeming dazed in the swirl of bodies, none
of which pressed too closely on them, but stayed about them. The rampway access gaped
ahead. A group of mahendo'sat law enforcement stood there, sticks in
hand, and the crowd went no farther. Pyanfar thrust her companions
through that line, with her own legs trembling under her -- want of
sleep, gods, want of rest. Chur was in the same condition, surely,
and Tully was hardly steady on his feet, unfit mentally and
physically for this kind of turmoil. She sighted on the rampway and
went, hard-breathing. But among the gantries
beside them . . . hani shadows. Moon Rising's folk, none of her own,
had spilled over from the next berth, behind the security line. "Come
on," she said to Chur and Tully. "Ignore them." She headed into the
rampway's ribbed and lighted gullet, had led the two of them up the
curving course almost to the security of their own airlock when she
heard someone coming behind. "In," she said to her
companions, and turned to bar the intruder who appeared around the
curve. Her ears were flat; she reached instinctively for the weapon
she had left behind -- but the figure was hani, silk-breeched and
jeweled, striding boldly right up the rampway. "Tahar," she
spat, waved a dismissing hand. "Gods, do we need complications?" "I've done napping."
The Tahar captain stopped just short of her, took her stance, hands
at her waist, a large figure, with a torn left ear beringed with
prosperity. Broadfaced ... a black scar crossed her mustache, making
it scant on the left side, and giving Dur Tahar no pleasant
expression. Her beard was crisply rippled and so was her mane,
characteristic of the southerners, dark bronze. Two of her crew
showed up behind her, like a set of clones. "We've managed,"
Pyanfar said, "without troubling your rest." Dur Tahar ignored her,
looked beyond her shoulder -- at what sight, Pyanfar had no trouble
guessing. "What's that thing, Chanur? What creature is that?" "That's a problem
we've got settled, thank you." "By the gods,
settled! We've just been ordered off the station, and it's all over
the dock about this passenger of yours. About hani involved with the
kif. About a deal you've made -- by the gods, I'll reckon you've
settled things. -- What are you, trading in live bodies now? You've
found yourself something special, haven't you? That fracas that sent
you kiting in here with your tail singed -- involved with that?" "That's enough."
Her claws came out. She was tired, gods, shaking on her feet, and she
stared at Dur Tahar with a dark tunnel closing about her vision. "If
you want to talk about this, you ask me by com. Not now." "Ah. You don't need
our help. Are you planning to stay here in dock with your tail
hanging... or did you and the mahendo'sat come up with a deal? What
kind of game are you proposing, Chanur?" "I'll make it clear
enough. Later. Get clear of my airlock." "What species is it?
Where from? The rumor flying the docks says kif space. Or knnn. Says
there's a knnn ship here that dropped a hani body." "I'll tell it to you
once, Tahar: we got this item at Meetpoint and the kif took out
Handur's Voyager for spite, no survivors. Caught them sitting at
dock, and they and we hadn't even been in communication. We dumped
cargo and ran for Urtur, and the kif who followed us struck at Faha's
Starchaser with no better reason. Whether Starchaser got away or not
I don't know, but they At least had a run at it. The kif want this
fellow badly. And it's gotten beyond simple profit and loss with
them. There's a hakkikt involved, and there's no stopping this thing
till we've got him. Maybe we did, at Urtur. He looked bad, and that
may settle it. But if you want to make yourself useful, you're
welcome to run our course." "Suppose you make
yourself generous. Give this thing into my hands. I'll see it gets
safe to Anuurn." "No, thanks." "I'll bet not. You
can deal with the mahendo'sat, after all, but not with a rival. Well,
Chanur's not going to sit on this one, I'll promise you that, Pyanfar
Chanur. And if this turns out to be the fiasco it promises to be,
I'll be on your heels. That brother of yours is getting soft. Back
home, they know it. This should do it, shouldn't it?" "Out!" "Give me the
information you traded the mahendo'sat. And we may view things in a
better light." "If you were mahe I'd
trust you more. Look him over, Dur Tahar. But anything else you want
to know . . . I'll decide on when I've got this straightened out.
Never fear; you'll get the same data I gave the mahendo'sat. But if
you leave this in our laps, then by the gods, we'll settle it our way
without your help." Dur Tahar laid her ears
back and started to go, lingered for one poisonous look beyond,
toward the airlock, and a focus snapped back on center. "I'll
ask you at Anuurn, then. And you'll have answers, gods rot you.
You'll come up with them." "Nothing personal,
Tahar. You always did lack vision." "When you beg my help
-- I might give it." "Out." Dur Tahar had made her
offer. Perhaps she expected a different answer. She flinched, managed
a lazy indifference, smoothed her rippled beard, turned and looked
back toward the airlock a last time, slowly, before she stalked out,
gathering her two crewwomen as she went. "Gods," Pyanfar
muttered through her teeth, put a hand wearily to the rampway wall
and turned about to the airlock, feeling suddenly older. That was
muffed. She should have been quicker on her mental feet, slower of
temper. The Tahar might have been talked into it. Maybe wanted to be
talked into it. If a Tahar could be trusted at their backs. She hated
the whole of it, mahe, Tahar, Outsider, all of it -- winced under
Chur's stare. Not a word from Chur the whole way back, regarding the
business she had conducted, this tape -- selling, trust-selling. And Tully's face ... of a
sudden he jerked away from Chur's grip and went into the airlock,
Chur hastening to stop him. Pyanfar broke into a run into the
hatchway, but Chur had got him. Tully had stopped against the inside
wall, his back against it, his eyes full of anger. "Captain," Chur
said, "the translator was working." Pyanfar reached into her
pocket and thrust her audio plug into her ear, faced Tully, who
looked steadily toward her. "Tully. That was not a friend. What
did you hear? What?" "You're same like
kif. Want the same maybe. What deal with the mahendo'sat?" "I saved your
miserable hide. What do you think? That you can travel through
Compact territory without everyone who sees you having the same
thoughts? You didn't want to deal with the kif -- good sense; but by
the gods, you haven't got a choice but us or the kif, my friend
Tully. All right. I traded them the tape you made -- but not that I
couldn't have gotten the ship repair without that: they're anxious to
get rid of us; they'd have come round tape or no tape, you can bet
they would. But now everyone's going to know about your kind; gods,
let the mahendo'sat make copies of it; let them sell it in the
standard kit. It's the best deal you can get. I'm not selling you,
you rag-eared bastard; can I make you understand that? And maybe if
your ships meet our ships . . . there'll be a tape in the translators
that may keep us from shooting at each other. We meet and trade.
Understand? Better deal than the kif give you." A tremor passed over his
face, expressions she could not read. The eyes spilled water, and he
made a move of his arm, jerked at Chur's grip on it and Chur
cautiously let him go. "You understand me?"
Pyanfar asked. "Do I make myself understood?" No response.
"You're free,"
Pyanfar said. "Those papers let you go anywhere. You want to
walk out the rampway, onto the dock? You want to go back to station
offices and stay with the mahe?" He shook his head. "That's no." "No. Pyanfar. I #." "Say again." He reached to his waist
and drew out the papers, offered them to her. "Your papers,"
Pyanfar said. "All in order. Go anywhere you like." He might have understood.
He pointed toward the door. "This hani -- want me go with him." "Her. Dur Tahar. No
friend of mine. Or to this ship. Nothing that concerns you." He stood a moment, seeming
to think it over. Finally he pointed back toward the inner hatch. "I
go sit down," he said, shoulders slumping. "I go sit.
Right?" "Go," she said.
"It's all right, Tully. You're all right." "Friend," he
said, and touched her arm in leaving, walked out with his head down
and exhaustion in his posture. "Follow him?" Chur asked. "Not conspicuously.
Docking's got his quarters out of commission. Get a proper cot for
the washroom." "We could take him
into crew quarters." "No. I don't want
that. There's nothing wrong with the washroom, for the gods' sake.
Just get him a sedative. I think he's had enough." "He's scared,
captain. I don't much blame him." "He's got sense. Go.
Tell Geran if she doesn't hear something about that repair crew
within half an hour, come get me." "Aye," Chur
murmured, and hastened off in Tully's wake. So. Done, for good or ill.
Pyanfar leaned against the wall, aching in all her bones, her vision
fuzzing. After a moment she walked out, down the vacant corridor
toward the lifts, hoping to all the gods Geran could find no incident
to put between her and bed. No one stopped her. She
rode the lift up, walked a sleep-drunken course down the central
corridor to her own door. "Aunt," Hilfy's
voice pursued her. She stopped with her hand against the lockplate
and looked about with a sour and forbidding stare. "Repair crew's on its
way," Hilfy said ever so quietly. "I thought you'd want to
know. Message just came." "You've been sitting
watch topside?" "Got a little rest. I
thought -- " "If Geran's on, it's
waste to duplicate effort. Get yourself back to quarters and stay
there. Sleep, gods rot you; am I supposed to coddle you later? Take
something if you can't. Don't come complaining to me later." "Captain," Hilfy
murmured, ears back, and bowed. Pyanfar hit the bar and
opened the door, walked in and punched it closed before the automatic
could function. Belatedly the look on Hilfy's face occurred to her;
and the long duty Hilfy had spent at com through transit, and that
she had intended to say something approving of that, and had not. Gods rot it. She sat down
on the side of the bed and dropped her head into her hands. Gods,
that she had staggered through the requisite interview with the
mahendo'sat, bargained with them, offended the Tahar -- and Tully ...
she had traded off what three of his shipmates had died to keep to
themselves. In such a condition she
gambled, with Chanur and Tully's whole species on the board. She dropped her hands
between her knees, finally reached for the bedside drawer where she
kept a boxful of pills. She shook one into her hand and put it into
her mouth -- spat it out in sudden revulsion and flung the open
boxful across the cabin. Pills rattled and circled and lay still. She
lay down on the bed as she was, drew the coverlet over herself,
tucked her ;arms about her head and shut her eyes, flinging herself
into an extended calculation about their routing out of here and
refusing to let her mind off that technical problem. She built the
numbers in front of her eyes and fended off the recollection of
Tully's face or Hilfy's, or the scuttling figure of the knnn with its
prize, or the kif which skulked and whispered together out on the
docks.
VII "Aunt." It was not com; it was
Hilfy in person, leaning over her bed, shaking at her. "Aunt."
Pyanfar came out of sleep with a wild reach to get her elbow under
her, shook herself, stared into Hilfy's dilated eyes. "It's
Starchaser," Hilfy said. "They've come through. They're in
trouble. They can't get dumped. The word just came in -- " "O gods."
Pyanfar kicked the coverlet off, scrambled out dressed as she was and
seized Hilfy by the arm on her way out of the room. "Talk, imp:
has anyone scrambled?" "Station's called
miners in the path . . . some mention of an outbound freighter being
able to change course. ..." Hilfy let herself be pulled through
the doorway into the corridor and loped along keeping up with her on
the way to the bridge. "They're twenty minutes lag out, crossing
Lijahan track zenith." "Twenty now?" "About." Haral was on the bridge,
standing by scan, with the area-light on her face, and her expression
was grim when she looked around at their arrival. "They've got
to get to the pod," Haral said. "No way anyone can get to
her in time. No way any rescue can haul that mass down, even if she's
stripped." "What's our status?" "We can't get there,"
Hilfy objected, plain logic. "Not for rescue,"
Pyanfar said quietly. "Repairs underway,"
Haral said. "Vane's unsecured. If they're running ahead of
company -- we're in trouble." Tirun came limping in,
loping haste, and there was a query from lowerdeck. "You're
getting all we've got," Haral relayed to Geran and Chur below.
"Can't tell anything yet." "Come on,"
Pyanfar muttered to the blip on systemic image. "Do it, Faha.
Get out of there." She sank down into the com cushion, an eye
still toward the screen, and punched through the station op code.
"This is The Pride of Chanur. Urgent relay the stationmaster,
Pyanfar Chanur speaking: warn you of possible hostile pursuit on tail
of incoming emergency. Repeat: warn you of possible hostile pursuit
of incoming emergency." "This message receive
clear, Pride of Chanur. Mahen ships answer emergency. Please stand
by." She watched scan, rested a
knuckle against her teeth and hissed a breath. Ships showed in the
schematic, traffic at dead standstill compared to the incoming streak
that was Starchaser, motion slowed enough to see only because of
systemwide scale. Everything was history, the images on the scope,
the voices from the zone of emergency. Unable to dump velocity,
Starchaser would streak helplessly across the system and lose herself
on an unaimed voyage to infinity. It was a long way to die. "Lost the
transmission," Haral said. Hilfy edged in, looking desperate,
tried the switches herself past Haral's side. Pyanfar gnawed the
underside of a^ claw and shook her head. The business of getting a
jump-mazed crew on their feet and headed to the escape pod -- in
Starchaser's type, high up on the frame -- and get it away, all this
within the minutes they had left. . . Then they could only hope,
if they could make it that far, that the pod's engines could hammer
down the velocity, give some jumpship the chance to match velocities
and lock onto the pod's small, manageable mass, so that they could be
dumped down. That freighter out there was the best chance the crew
had, if only they could get loose. "Pod's away!"
Haral exclaimed, and Tirun and Hilfy were pounding each other on the
back. Pyanfar clenched her two hands together in front of her mouth
and stared flateared at the scan, where a new schematic indicated the
probable course of the pod which had now parted company with doomed
Star-chaser. Both dots advanced along the track, but a gap developed,
the pod's deceleration far from sufficient to rid itself of a
jumpship's velocity before it gave out, but doing what it could. The
crew would likely black out in the stress: that was a mercy. Now it
was a race to see if the freighter could overhaul the pod or whether
the pod would leave the system. "Mahe freighter?"
Pyanfar asked. Haral nodded. The Pride was on
station-fed transmission; and station had to be using the feed from
ships farther out, the Lijahan mines, whatever was in a position to
have data, and relative time was hard to calculate now. The freighter
came up by major increments while the minutes passed, boosting itself
on its jump field. The gap still narrowed with agonizing
sluggishness, as scan shifted, keeping up with events which were now
long decided. Com sputtered, a wailing
transmission. Knnn. "Gods," Tirun said. "A knnn's out
there in it." Station command responded,
a tc'a voice. There were other transmissions, knnn voices, more than
one, a dissonance of wails. "Chanur," said a
hani voice, clear and close at hand. "Is this also your doing?" Pyanfar reached for it,
punched in the contact, retracted the claw with a moral effort.
"Tahar, is that a question or a complaint?" "This is Dur Tahar.
It's a question, Chanur. What do you know about this?" "I told you. Let's
keep it off com, Tahar." Silence. The Tahar were no
allies of the Faha crew. It was a Chanur partisan in trouble, but if
any ship at station could have moved in time, Moon Rising would have
tried: she did not doubt it. It was a painful thing to watch, what
was happening on scan. Close to her, Tirun had settled, and Hilfy,
simply watching the screen while her Faha kinswomen and the wreckage
that had been a Faha ship hurtled closer and closer to the boundaries
of the pickup. After such a point insystem scan could not follow
them. Station was getting transmission now from a different source,
from the merchanter Hasatso, the freighter tracking Starchaser, the
only ship in range. The blip that was Starchaser itself finally went
off the screen. "Chanur ship,"
station sent. "Tahar ship. Advise you merchanter Hasatso have
make cargo dump; do all possible." "Chanur and Faha will
compensate," Pyanfar replied, and hard upon that Moon Rising
sent thanks to Hasatso via station. "Gods look on them,"
Haral muttered -- a cargo dumped, to close the gap, to close on an
emergency not of their species. Knnn wailed. Elsewhere
there was silence. For a long while there seemed only one rhythm of
breaths on The Pride, above and below. "They're nearly on
it," Hilfy breathed. "They've got them,"
said Tirun. "No way they can miss now." It went slowly. The
transmissions from Hasatso became more and more encouraging; and at
long last they reported capture. "Hani signal," Hasatso
told Kirdu Station, "in pod. Live." Pyanfar breathed out the
breath she had been holding. Grinned, reached and squeezed Hilfy's
arm. Hilfy looked drained. "Tahar," Pyanfar sent then, "did
you receive that report?" "Received,"
Tahar said curtly. Pyanfar broke it off, sat
a moment with hands clasped on the board in front of her. A ship
lost; a tradition; that deserved its own mourning. Home and life to
the Faha crew, and that was gone. "Station," she sent after
a moment, "advise the Faha crew that Chanur sends its profound
sorrow, and that ker Hilfy Chanur par Faha will offer the resources
of The Pride of Chanur, such as they are." \ "Advise them,"
another voice sent directly, "that Dur Tahar o/Tahar's Moon
Rising also offers her assistance." That was courtesy. Pyanfar
leaned back in the cushion, finally turned and rose with a stretch of
her shoulders. "What can be done's done. Go fetch something to
drink, Hilfy; if I'm roused out, someone owes me that. Drink for all
that want it. Breakfast. I'll hear reports less urgent during. --
Haral, who's supposed to be on duty?" "I am." "So. Then close down
lowerdeck. Tirun, back you go." "Aye' Tirun muttered,
and levered herself up stiffly and limped off in Hilfy's wake.
Pyanfar settled against the com post counter and looked at Haral,
seated at the number two spot. "That knnn's fallen
into pattern about Lijahan," Haral said, paying attention to the
screens. "Still making commotion. A wonder they don't try for
the cargo salvage out there." "Huh. Only grant they
all stay put." "Skimmer's still
working out there at our tail. They've got a crew outside working the
connectors. The cable's ready to secure. But fourteen panels were
missing and six loose, and they estimate another twenty hours working
shift on shift to get the new ones hooked up." "Gods." Pyanfar
ran a hand over her brow and into her mane, thinking of kif -- of
attack which had chewed Starchaser to scrap. There were others
besides the knnn who might be expected to rush to that salvage out
there; there were the onstation kif ... who showed no sign of moving.
That was unnatural. No one was moving, except maybe a few miners out
there with ambition. No one from station. Word was out; rumor . . .
had a wind up everyone's back. "The Tahar,"
Haral said further, after a moment, "appealed that order to put
out with an appeal to finish cargo operations. It was allowed." "Helpful. At least
they're here." "Helpful as the Tahar
in general. Begging your pardon." "I'll talk to them." "You think Tahar'd
move to guard our tail?" "No," she said.
"I don't. Not unless they see profit in it. What are they doing?
Not taking cargo." "Offloading.
Stripping to run. Canisters pouring out like maggots." Pyanfar nodded. "Station
wants that cargo safe then; and Tahar's going to dump that out fast
down to the bit she uses to stall with. The Personage has backed
down, that's what; got a few of his onstation companies wailing about
losses, and Tahar'll stay here as long as she likes. That'll give me
time." "Gods, the bill on
this." "Expensive, our
Outsider. In all senses." She looked about as Hilfy came through
the archway with a large tray, two cups and two breakfasts. "Thanks,"
Pyanfar said, taking plate and cup . . . paused to look at Hilfy, who
had stopped to look at the situation on the screen. They were still
getting transmission relayed from Hasatso, with occasional breakup
which indicated velocity dump. "Going to be a while,"
Pyanfar said. "Unless they've got a medical emergency I doubt
they'll boost up again after turnover, just ride it slow in. Hours
from now. Go on back to quarters. I mean it." A few ports ago Hilfy
might have argued, might have laid her ears back and sulked. She
nodded now and went. Pyanfar slid a glance at Haral, who stared after
the retreating youngster and then nodded once, thoughtfully. "Huh," Pyanfar
said, digging into the breakfast, and for some little time she and
Haral sat and watched the scan and ate. "Tell you, cousin,"
Pyanfar said finally, "you go off-watch and I'll take it." "Not needful,
captain." "Don't be noble. I've
got some things to do. One thing you can do for me. When you go down,
look in on Tully. Make sure he's all right." "Right," Haral
said. She stood up and gathered the dishes onto the tray. "But
he's all right, captain. Chur's bedded down to keep an eye on him." Pyanfar had been finishing
her last sip of gfi, to surrender the cup. She banged it down on the
tray. "Gods blast -- Did I or did I not order him separate?" Haral's ears dropped in
dismay. "Chur said he was upset, captain; made herself a pallet
in the washroom so's he wouldn't wake up by himself. She said -- your
pardon, captain -- sedated, he looked so bad -- You were in bed,
captain. It was my discretion." Pyanfar exhaled shortly.
"So. Well. Depressed, Chur Says." Haral nodded. "We'd
take him," Haral said. I "Chur said."
"Um." Haral
figured that train of things of a sudden and her mustache-hairs drew
down. "Sorry, captain." "Him, for the gods'
sake." "Not as if he was
hani, captain." "Not as if,"
Pyanfar said after a moment. "All right. Put him where you want;
that's crew business, none of mine. Work him. He claims to be a scan
tech. Let him sit watch. Who's on next?" "Ker Hilfy." "With someone of the
experienced crew. Someone who's made their mistakes." Haral grinned and rubbed
the black scar which crossed her nose. "Aye. One of us will sort
him out." "Off with you."
Haral went. Pyanfar slid
down off the counter and transferred the activity to her own board,
sat down in her own deeply padded cushion and ran the incoming
messages of hours past. There was nothing there but what Haral had
said, Tahar's argument about staying and the beginnings of
Starchaser's crisis. Sporadic information still came in: Hasatso sent
word of four survivors. . . . Four. A cold depression
settled over her. Four out of seven crew on
that ship. It was more than the physical body of Starchaser lost out
there, more even than a life or two in a crew kin-close. Four out of
seven was too heavy casualties for a group to recover itself -- not
the way it had once been. Gods, to start over, having lost that
heavily --
"Station," she
sent, "this is Pyanfar Chanur: confirm that transmission from
Hasatso. Names of survivors." "Pride of Chanur,"
station sent back to her, "Hasatso transmit four survivors good
condition. No more information. We relay query." She thanked station
absently, sat staring at the screen a moment. There was lagtime to
contend with on that request, nothing to do but wait. She bestirred
herself to run checks with the ships at repair on their own damages,
to contact station market and to arrange a few purchases and
deliveries via dockside courier services. There was delay on the
communications: everyone at station seemed muddle-witted in the
confusion, down to the jobbers in commodities. "Station, what's
keeping that answer?" she sent main op. "Crew refuse reply,"
the answer came back. Communication failure there too. Nerves.
Possibly shaken-up hani and mahe rescuers were at odds. Ship lost,
cargoes lost, lives lost. An ugly business. And one of the knnn had
put out from station, putting out wailing transmission and wallowing
uncertainly about station's peripheries like a globe of marshfire,
touching off ticking objections/accusations/ pleas? from the tc'a
control. Gods. The oxygen-breather
command went silent for the moment. Tc'a chattered and hissed.
Pyanfar reached for translation output, but it failed: tc'a
translated best when it was simple docking instruction or operations
which were common to all ships. This was something else, gods rot
them. There was silence finally,
even from the tc'a. The knnn moved out farther and stayed there.
Hasatso continued its slow inward progress. At last the mahendo'sat
side of station came on again, quiet operational directions for the
incoming freighter, nothing informational. Pyanfar sent them no
questions. No one did.
The news came when Hasatso
entered final approach: four survivors, a fifth dead in the stress of
the pod eject, of wounds, and allowed to go with the pod when Hasatso
released it, not a hani choice, but mahe honor. Two went with
Starchaser, dead in the attack or unable to get to the pod -- the
information was not clear. There was a name: first officer Hilan
Faha, survivor; and another: Lihan Faha -- the captain, the third
casualty. "Aunt," Hilfy
said, when Pyanfar called her to the bridge and told her, "I'd
like to go down to the dock where they are. I know it's dangerous.
But I'd like to go. By your leave." Pyanfar set her hand on
Hilfy's shoulder. Nodded. "I'll go with you," she said, at
which Hilfy looked both relieved and pleased. "Geran," she
said, turning to lean over the com board, putting it through on
allship. "Geran." The acknowledgment came
back.
"Geran, take watch
again, lowerdeck op. New word's come in. Starchaser captain is lost,
and two of the crew. Hilfy and I are going to meet the rescue ship;
we'll bring the Faha back aboard if they're so inclined. No sense
them having to put up with mahe questions and forms." There was a moment's
delay, a sorrowful acknowledgment. "Come," Pyanfar
said to Hilfy then, and they walked out toward the lift. Hilfy's
bearing was straight enough, her face composed . . . not good news,
when she had gone to sleep thinking that things were better than they
were; but they had something, at least, of the Faha crew, something
saved; and that was still more than they had once hoped. Another matter to the kif
account, when it came to reckonings. But if there were kif out there
now -- and there might be, hovering at the system's edges, the same
game that they themselves had played at Urtur -- then they were
waiting some moment of advantage, some moment when there were not
five armed mahendo'sat patrol ships cruising a pattern out there.
Allship had waked more
than Geran. Tirun was up, sitting in op when they came down toward
the lock; and Geran, who had been assigned the duty; and Chur was
standing about with Tully, who looked vaguely distressed in this
disturbance he likely failed to comprehend. Haral showed up in haste
from farther down the corridor. "Going with you, by your leave,"
Haral said, and Pyanfar nodded, not sorry of it. "Kif out
there," Pyanfar said. "I'm not getting caught twice the
same way." "Take care,"
Tirun wished them as they went, and in the airlock, while Haral
opened the outer hatch, Pyanfar delayed to take the pistol from its
secure place in the locker by com and to slip it into her pocket. "No detectors to
pass," Pyanfar said. "Come on." The hatchway stayed open
behind them; they walked out the ribbed rampway and down onto the
dockside. Engines whined on their left: Moon Rising was still about
her offloading, and canisters were coming off into the hands of
mahendo'sat dockworkers, not hani crew. "They may have gone
to meet the Faha too," Pyanfar judged, marking the total absence
of a hani supervisor outside. It was a courtesy to be expected,
politics aside in a hani-ship's misfortune. "Not much stirring,"
Haral said. That was so. Where
normally the vast docks would have had a busy pedestrian traffic up
and down the vast curve, there was a dearth of casual strollers, and
the activity about Moon Rising was the only activity of any measure
in sight. Dockworkers, service workers, mahe with specific business
underway paused to stare at them and after them as they walked. Stsho
huddled near their accesses and whispered together. The kif were out
about, predictably, clustered together near the accessway of one of
the ships, a mass of black robes, seven, eight of them, who lounged
near their canisters and clicked insults after them. And at one of those
insults Pyanfar's ears flicked, and she stopped the impulse in
mid-twitch, trying to make believe she had not heard or understood.
He knows, hani thief. How many more hani ships will you kill? "Captain -- "
Haral murmured, and Hilfy started to turn around. "Front, gods
-- " Pyanfar hissed and seized Hilfy by the arm. "What do
you want to start, at what odds?" "What do we do?"
Hilfy asked, walking obediently between them. "How can he know?" "Because one of those
kif ships is his, imp; came in here from Kita; and now Akukkakk's
enlisted other ships to help him. They'll scatter out of here like
spores when we go, and gods help us, we're stuck till we get that
repair done." "They as good as hit
Starchaser themselves. I'd like to -- " "We'd all like to,
but we have better sense, Come on." "If they catch us on
the dock -- " "All the more reason
we get the survivors aboard and get off the docks. Afraid you're not
going to get that station liberty here either, imp." "Think I can do
without," Hilfy muttered. They kept walking, down
among the gantries, past idle crews, as far as number fifty-two
berth, where a surplus of bystanders gathered, a dark crowd of
mahendo'sat, sleek-furred, tall bodies which made it difficult to see
anything. Medical personnel were among them; and station officials,
conspicuous by their collars and kilts. And hani, to be sure.
Elbowing through the gathering, Pyanfar caught sight of bronze manes
and a glitter of jewels on a hani ear, and she made for that group
with Haral and Hilfy behind her. . "It's high time you
showed up," Dur Tahar said when she arrived. "Mind yourself,"
Pyanfar said. "My niece behind me is Faha." Dur Tahar slid a glance in
that direction without comment. "Hasatso's due to touch any
moment," she said. "We've got some kif
getting together down the dock. I'd watch that if I were you." "Your problem." "A warning, that's
all." "If you start
something, Chanur, don't look for our help." "Gods rot you, you
give me no encouragement to be civil." "I don't need your
civility." "A mutual hazard,
Tahar." "What, are you asking
favors?" The claws twitched.
"Asking sense, rot you." "I'll think on it." Hasatso touched, a
crashing of locks and grapples. Gantries slid up and crews opened
station ports one after another in response to the ship, connected
lines, started the rampway out to meet the lock. It was an
agonizingly slow process from the spectator ranks, and only the
mahendo'sat found occasion to chatter. And finally a distant
whine and thump announced the breaching of the freighter's hatch,
first in procedure: station reciprocated, and the mahe crew escorted
off four hani, exhausted hani, one with an arm bandaged and bound to
her chest, all of them looking as if they were doing well to be
walking at all. Necessarily the mahendo'sat officials moved in: there
was signing of papers, mahe and hani; and Pyanfar took Hilfy by the
shoulder, worked forward with her. Hilfy went the last on her own and
offered an embrace to the refugees, an embrace wearily returned by
the Faha, one after the other. "My captain,"
Hilfy said then, "my aunt Pyanfar Chanur; my crewmate Haral
Araun par Chanur." There were embraces down
the line. "Our ship is open to you," Pyanfar told the first
officer, whose haggard face and dazed eyes took her in and seemed at
the moment to have too much to take in, with the mahe offering
medical assistance, station wanting immediate statements. Pyanfar
left the Faha momentarily to Hilfy and to the Tahar who had moved up
to offer their own condolences, and herself took the hands of the
mahe rescue crew one after the other, and those of the apparent
captain, a tall hulking fellow who looked as bruised and bewildered
as the Faha, who was probably at the moment reckoning his lost cargo
and the wrath of companies and what comfort all this gratitude was
going to win him when the shouting died down and the bills came in. "You're captain,
mahe?" Pyanfar asked. A sign of the head. "I'm Pyanfar Chanur;
Chanur has filed a report in your behalf at Kirdu; Chanur company
will give you hani status at Anuurn: you come there, understand? Make
runs to Anuurn. No tax." Dark mahe eyes brightened
somewhat. "Good," he said, "good," and squeezed
both her hands in a crushing grip, turned and chattered at his own
folk -- likely one of those mahe who could scarcely understand the
pidgin, and good might be about half his speaking vocabulary. He
seemed to make it clear to the others, who broke out in grins, and
Pyanfar escaped through the crush toward Hilfy and the others, got
her arm about Hilfy and got the whole hani group moving through the
pressure of tall mahendo'sat bodies. The Tahar made a wedge with
them, and they broke into the clear. "This way,"
Pyanfar said, and first officer Hilan Faha took the other elbow of
her injured companion and made sure of the other two, and they
started walking, escaping the officials who called after them about
forms -- Chanur, Faha, and Tahar in one group up the dock, toward the
upcurved horizon where The Pride and Moon Rising were docked. "How far?" the
Faha officer asked in a shaking voice. "Close enough,"
Hilfy assured her. "Take your time." The way back seemed far
longer, slower with the Faha's pace; Pyanfar scanned the dark places
along their route, not the only one watching, she was sure.
Inevitably there were the kif ships; and the kif were there, ten of
them now . . . calling out in mocking clicks their insults and their
invitation to come and ship with them. "We take you to your
port," they howled. "We see you get your reward, hani
thieves." A wild look came into
Hilan Faha's eyes. She stopped dead and turned that stare on them.
"No," Pyanfar said at once. "We're here on station's
tolerance. This isn't our territory. Not on the docks." The kif howled and chirred
their abuse. But the Faha moved, and they made their way farther with
the kif voices fading in the distance, past the stsho, who stared
with large, pale eyes, up past a comforting number of mahendo'sat
vessels, and virtual silence, dock crews and passers-by standing
quietly and watching and respectful sympathy. "Not so much
farther," Pyanfar said. The Faha had not the
breath to answer, only kept walking beside them, and finally, at long
last, they had reached the area of The Pride's berth. "Faha,"
Dur Tahar said then, "Moon Rising has no damage, and The Pride
does. We offer you passage that's assuredly more direct and quicker
home." "We'll accept,"
Hilan Faha said, to Pyanfar's consternation. "Cousin," Hilfy
said in a voice carefully modulated. "Cousin, The Pride will put
out quickly enough; and we need the help. We need you, cousins. You
might find common cause in the company." "Tamun's had all she
can stand," Hilan Faha said, with a protective move of her hand
on her injured comrade's shoulder. She looked toward the Tahar.
"We'll board, by your leave." "Come," Dur
Tahar said, and the Tahar fell about the four and escorted them
across to their own access. Hilfy took a couple of steps forward,
ears flat, stood there, hands fallen to her sides, and took a good
long moment before she turned about again, with her kinswomen
disappearing upward into the rampway of Moon Rising. Mortification
was in every line of her stance, a youngster's humiliation, that set
her down as well as set her aside, and Pyanfar thrust hands into her
waistband to keep them from awkwardness -- no reaching out to the imp
as if she were a child, no comfort to be offered. It was Hilfy's
affair, to take it how she would. "They've had a shock,"
Hilfy said after a moment. "I'm sorry, aunt." "Come on,"
Pyanfar said, nodding toward their rampway. There was a red wash
about her own vision, a slow seething. She was bound to take the
matter as it fell for Hilfy's sake, but it rankled, all the same. She
walked up first and Haral last, leaving Hilfy her silence and her
dignity. Cowards, Pyanfar thought,
and swallowed that thought too for Hilfy's sake. They desperately
needed the added hands: that thought also gnawed at her, less worthy.
They needed the Faha. But the Faha had had enough of kif. And there were kif ships
out there, waiting. She was increasingly certain of it -- if not
actually on the fringes of Kirdu System, which they might be, at
least scattered all about, waiting the moment. More and more kif
ships, a gathering swarm of them, unprecedented in their cooperation
with each other. She passed the airlock
into the corridor, and Chur and Tirun who had turned out with the
evident intention of welcoming their Faha guests -- stopped in their
exit from the op room,
simply stopped. "Our friends changed
their minds," Pyanfar said curtly. "They 1 decided to take
passage with Tahar. Something about an injury a one of them suffered,
and the Tahar promised them a more direct route home." That put at least an
acceptable face on matters for Hilfy's sake. They retreated as
Pyanfar walked into the op room, looked at Geran and Tully who sat
there, Geran having well understood and Tully looking disturbed,
catching the temper in the air, no doubt, but not understanding it.
"Nothing to do with you." Pyanfar said absently, settling
into a chair at the far counter, looking at the system-image which
Geran had been monitoring. Hilfy and Haral came in together, and
there was a strained silence in the op room, all of them gathered
there and Hilfy trying to keep a good face on. "Well, good luck to
them," Tirun muttered. "Gods know they've seen enough." "There are kif out
there on the dock," Pyanfar said, "who know too much.
Getting cheeky about it. They've come in from Kita ahead of us, part
of the bunch from Meetpoint or Urtur -- Urtur, I'll reckon, since I
checked names and they weren't the same as there. Just passing the
message from one kif to the next. It's getting tight here." "There'll be more
soon," Haral said. "I'll bet there's some outsystem.
Captain, think we can talk the mahe to run us escort to our
jumppoint? Surely we've got leverage enough for that." "That story will go
from station to station," Pyanfar said bitterly. "Gods, but
I don't think we've got much choice. Get them to shepherd us out of
here." "When we can get our
tail put together again," Tirun said glumly. There was a noise from
down the hall, a footstep in the airlock. Every head turned for the
doorway and Pyanfar reached for the gun in her pocket and thrust her
way past Tirun getting to the op room door and the corridor, clicking
the safety off the gun. It was hani -- Hilan Faha,
who flung up a startled hand and stopped at the sight of her. Pyanfar
punched the safety back on with a clawtip and thrust the weapon back
into her pocket, aware of others of her crew now behind her. "Changed your mind of
a sudden?" she asked the Faha. "Need to talk to you.
To my young cousin." "To your cousin, rot
you; and to me. Come on inside. Neither she nor I'll talk out here
like dockside peddlers." "Ker Pyanfar,"
the Faha murmured, manners which in no wise mollified her temper.
Pyanfar waved the lot of them back into the op room -- only then
recalled Tully, who was trapped there in the corner, but there was
nothing of secret in his presence on the ship, and no cause to send
him slinking out past them all. Let the Faha talk in front of him;
let her deliver her excuses under an Outsider's stare -- served her
right. And Hilan Faha stopped in
the doorway at the sight of Tully, this naked-skinned creature
hani-styled and hani-dressed sitting at the counter among the crew;
and Hilan's ears went flat. "This," she said, rounding on
Pyanfar, "this is that item the kif wanted -- isn't it?" "His name is Tully." Hilan's mouth tightened,
am ominous furrowing of the nose. "A live item. By the greater
gods, where have you been, Chanur, and what's going on with this
business?" "If you were
traveling on this ship you might ask and I might answer. As things
are, you can learn when the Tahar do." "Rot you, Starchaser
died in your cause, for this -- " She spat, swallowed down a
surplus of words when Pyanfar stared at her sullenly. "It was
the captain's decision; we off-loaded everything at Urtur and tried
to run to give you a break for it. But where were you then? Where was
our help?" "Blind, Hilan Faha --
off in the dust and stark blind. We tried, believe that; but at the
last we had to jump for it or risk collision; we hoped you could get
off in what confusion we created." Hilan drew a quieter
breath. "The captain's decision, not mine. I'd not have budged
out of dock: know that. I'd have sat there and let you sort it out
with the kif, this so-named theft of yours. . . ." "You take kif word
above mine?" "If you have an
explanation I'll be glad to hear it. My cousins are dead. We're
broken. We'll not get another ship, not so likely. Great Chanur makes
plans, but the likes of us -- we'll go on other Faha ships, wherever
we can get a berth. I'll reckon you know where the profit's to be
found, and, gods rot your conniving hide, you've stirred up what a
lot of ships are going to bleed for. What a lot of small companies
are going to go under for. They gave me a message to give you,
Pyanfar Chanur -- the kif gave me this to tell you: that what you've
done is too much to ignore and too great to let pass. That they'll
come after you wherever you are in whatever numbers it takes -- even
to Anuurn. That they'll make it clear to all hani that this prize of
yours is no profit to you. This from their hakkikt. Akukkakk. Him
from Urtur. His words." "Kif threats. I'd
thought you had more nerve." "No empty threats,"
Hilan said, eyes dilated, her nostrils flared and sweat-glistening.
"Tell all hani, this Akukkakk says -- desert this Pyanfar
Chanur or see desolation . . . even to Anuurn space." "And where did you
hear all this? From a scattering of ships and a kif who never caught
us -- who failed to catch you. Hilan Faha; and if we'd gotten
together at Urtur -- " "No. -- No. You don't
understand. They did catch us, Chanur. Did overhaul us. Killed two of
my cousins doing it. At Kita. And they let us go ... but we broke
down in the jump. They let us go to deliver that message." The Faha's shame was
intense. There was a silence in the room, no one seeming to breathe. "So," said
Pyanfar, "do you believe all your enemies say?" "I see this,"
Hilan said, gesturing at Tully. "And all of a sudden the game
looks a lot larger than before. All of a sudden I see reason that the
kif might gather, and why they might not stop. Chanur's ambition --
has gone too far this time. Whatever you're into, I don't want part
of it. My sister's alive; and two of my cousins; and we're going
home. -- Cousin," she said, looking at Hilfy, "to you -- I
apologize." Hilfy said nothing, only
stared with hurt in her eyes. "Hilfy can leave with
you if she likes," Pyanfar said. "Without my blame. It
might be a prudent thing to do ... as you point out." "I'd be pleased to
take her," Hilan said. "I stay with my
ship," Hilfy said, and Pyanfar folded her arms over a stomach
moiling with wishes one way and the other at once. And pride -- that
too. "So," Pyanfar
said, "I wish you safe journey. Best we should travel together,
but I'm sure that's not in the Tahar's mind now." "No. It's not."
The Faha looked down, and up again, in Tully's direction, a darkening
of the eyes. "If you considered your relations to others, you
wouldn't have done this thing. You've taken on too much this time.
And others will think so." "What I took on
myself, arrived on our ship without a by your leave or my knowledge
it existed. What would you do with a refugee who ran onto your ship?
Hand him over to the kif at their asking? I don't sell lives." "But you don't mind
losing them." "You throw away what
they did," Hilfy said suddenly, "with your smallness." The Faha's ears flattened.
"What are you to judge? Talk to me when you've got some years on
you, cousin. This -- " She came dangerously near Tully, and Chur
who had been sitting on a counter slid down to plant both feet,
barring the way. Tully got out of his chair and stood as far back in
the bend of the counter as he could get. The Faha shrugged, a
careless gesture throwing away her intent. "I've another word,"
the Faha said, looking straight at Pyanfar. "Whether or not you
intended what you've involved yourself in -- it just may be the
finish. Your allies might have stood by you, but it's all gotten too
tangled. It's gotten too risky. How long since you've been home?" "Some few months."
Pyanfar drew in a breath and thrust her hands into her belt, with the
taste of something bad coming -- that ill feeling of a house at its
height, in which any breath of change was trouble; and of a sudden
she misliked that look on the Faha's face, that truculence which
melted into something of discomfort, a decent shame. "Maybe more
than that," Pyanfar said, "if you count that I didn't go
downworld last call. What is it, Faha? What is it you're bursting to
tell me?" "A son of yours --
has taken Mahn from Khym Mann. He's neighbor to Chanur now. He has
ambitions. The old Mahn is in exile, and Kohan Chanur is finding
sudden need of all his allies." Hilan Faha shrugged, down-eared
and white about the nose and looking altogether as if she would wish
to be elsewhere at the moment, instead of bringing such news to a
Chanur ship. "My captain would have backed you; but what are we
now, with one of our ships gone, one out of the three Faha owns; and
what do we think when you take on something like this when you
already have as much as Chanur can handle? You've lost your cargo;
you've gotten yourself a feud with the kif, and kif threatening to go
into Anuurn /ones, for the gods' sake -- how can Chanur hold onto its
other allies when that starts? I've lost my ship, my captain, some of
my cousins -- and I have to think of my family. I can't involve
myself with you, not now: I can't make Faha part of this and get our
ships a feud with the kif. You're about to lose everything. Others
will decide the same, and Chanur won't be there even if you get back.
I'm going home, Ker Pyanfar, on the Tahar ship because I have to,
because I'm not tangling what's left of us in Chanur fortunes." "You're young,"
Pyanfar said, looking down her nose. "The young always worry.
You're right, your captain would have backed me. She had the nerve
for it. But go your way, Hilan Faha. I'll pay your debts because I
promised; Chanur will reward the mahe who pulled you out. And when
I've settled with that whelp Kara I'll be in better humor, so I may
even forget this. So you won't worry how to meet me in future --
don't fear too much. I'll not regard you too badly ... the young do
grow; but by the gods I'll never regard you the way I did your
captain. You're not Lihan, Hilan Faha, and maybe you never will be." The Faha fairly shook with
anger. "To be paid the way you paid her -- " "She'd curse me to a
mahe hell if she were here, but she'd not do what you've done. She'd
not run out on a friend. Go on, Hilan Faha, leave my deck. A safe
voyage to you and a quick one." For a moment the Faha
might have struck out; but she was worn thin and hopeless and the
moment and the courage went. "Her curse on you then," she
said, and turned and stalked out, not so straight in the shoulders,
not so high of head as she had come in. Pyanfar scowled and looked at
Hilfy, and Hilfy herself was virtually shaking. "Kohan never said
anything about this Mahn business in his letter," Pyanfar said.
"What do you know, niece?" "I don't," Hilfy
said. "I won't believe it. I think the Faha's been listening to
rumors." "How much did you
know about the estates when you were at home? Where was your head
then, but on The Pride? Is it possible something was brewing and you
didn't hear?" "There was always
talk; Kara Mahn was always hanging about the district. He and Tahy.
There -- was some calling back and forth; I think na Khym talked to
father direct." "Rot his hide, Kohan
could have said something in that letter." "He sent me,"
Hilfy said in a small, stricken voice. "When The Pride turned up
in system I asked to go, and he said he'd never permit it; and then
-- the next night he gave me the letter and put me in the plane and
gods, I was off to the port like that. Hardly a chance to pack. Said
I had to hurry or The Pride would leave port and I'd miss my chance.
Like that, at night; but I thought -- I thought it was because ships
don't calculate day and night, and that shuttle was going up anyway." "O gods,"
Pyanfar groaned, and sat down against the counter, looked up at all
the ring of anxious faces. "Not yet that son of mine doesn't.
Gods blight the kif; we'll settle them, but we're going to take care
of that small business at home; that's first." Ears pricked. "We're
with you," Haral said. "Gods, yes, home. Going to shake me
some scruffs when I get there." "Hai!" Geran
agreed, and Tirun; and Tully visibly flinched, calmed again as Chur
patted his shoulder. He settled and Hilfy sat down beside him, put
her hand on his other shoulder, two disconsolate souls who shared not
much at all but their misery. "We'll straighten it
out," Pyanfar said to Hilfy. "We'll do it on our terms.
Agreed, niece?" "He got me out of
there," Hilfy said. "I could have helped and he saw it
coming and he moved me out." "Huh. You're not old
enough to know your father from my view, with all respect for your
own. He thinks, some time before a problem comes on him -- not much
meditation during, gods know, but he sets things up like pieces on a
board. Too rotted proud to call me downworld, ah, yes; too rotted
smart to have young Hilfy Chanur at hand to get herself in a tangle
with her Mahn cousins and to pitchfork that temper of Kohan's into it
... don't get your ears down at me, imp; we're family here. The sun
rises and sets on your shoulder so far as your father's concerned,
and that blasted son of mine would go right for the greatest
irritance he could give your father if he wanted to take on Chanur --
your precious inexperienced self. No, Kohan just cleared the deck,
that's all. Chances are he was wrong; he's not immune to that either.
I'd sooner have had you there; I think you'd have handled young Kara
right enough; and Tahy with him. But if Moon Rising's going home,
it's to carry the kind of news the Tahar have gotten here; it's going
to make trouble, no thanks to the Faha: and there's a time past which
Kohan's going to be hard put. He's got -- what mates in residence?
Your mother and who?" "Akify and Lilun." "Hope your mother
stands by him," Pyanfar said heavily: the Kihan and the Garas
were ornaments. She walked over to the counter and stared at the scan
a moment. "No matter. Whatever's going on, we'll put it in
order." "Pyanfar -- " Tully's strange voice. She
turned about and looked at him, recalled the pager and turned it on
broadcast, not bothering with the plug. "Question,"
Tully said, and made a vague gesture toward the door where the Faha
had left. "He fight." "She," Pyanfar
said impatiently. "All she." Tully bit his lip and looked
confused. "It's nothing to do with you," Pyanfar said.
"Nothing you'd understand." "I go." he
offered, starting to slide from his place on the counter, but Chur
held his shoulder. "No," Chur said. "It's all right,
Tully. No one's angry at you." "You're not the
cause," Pyanfar said. "Not of this." She walked to the
door, looked back at the crew. "We'll settle it," she said
to the crew, and turned and walked out, down the corridor and alone
toward the lift. Khym overthrown. Dead,
maybe. At the least in exile. The loss of her mate oppressed her to a
surprising degree. Mahn in young Kara's hands would not be what it
had been in Khym's. Khym's style had been easygoing and gracious and
admittedly lazy: he was a comfortable sort of fellow to come back to,
who liked fine things and loved to sit in the shade of his garden and
listen to the tales she could spin of far "ports he would never
see. Boundless curiosity, gentle curiosity. That was Khym Mahn. And
the son he had indulged and pardoned had come back and taken his
garden and his house and his name, while poor Khym -- gods knew where
he was, or in what misery. She rode the lift up to
main level and entered her own quarters, shut the door and sat down
at the desk . . . forbore for a long time to pull out the few
mementoes she bothered to keep, keeping home more in her mind than in
objects. Finally she looked at what she had, a picture, a smooth gray
stone -- odd how pleasant a bit of stone felt, and how alien in this
steel world; stone that conjured the Kahin Hills, the look and the
sound of grass in the wind, and the warmth of the sun and the slick
cold of the rain on the rocks which thrust up out of the grassy
hillsides. Her son . . . cast Khym
out: moved in next to Chanur to threaten Kohan himself, to break
apart all that she had done and built and all that Kohan held. Small
wonder Kohan had wanted Hilfy out of harm's way -- out of a situation
in which tempers could be triggered and reason lost. Put some experience on
her, Kohan had asked. And: Take care of her. She put the things away,
and sat thinking, because while repairs proceeded, there was little
else she could do. They sat here locked into station's embrace and
hoping that the kif stayed off their vulnerable backside. Sat here
while their enemies had time to do what they liked. Strike at Anuurn itself --
Akukkakk could not be so rash. He had not that many ships, that he
could do such a thing. It was bluster, of the sort the kif always
used, hyperbole ... of the sort they always flung out, hoping for
more gains from an enemy's panic than force could win. Unless the
hakkikt was mad ... a definition which, between species, lacked
precision. Unless the hakkikt commanded followers more interested in
damage than in gain. No hakkikt on record had
ever stirred as wide a distance, involving so many ships. No one had
ever done what this one had done, attacking a stsho station,
harassing and threatening an entire starsystem and all its traffic as
he had done at Urtur. She sat and gnawed at her
lip and reckoned that the threat might have substance to it after
all. She checked scan finally, on her own terminal. Nothing showed
but the expected. The knnn still hovered off from station: when she
searched audio the singing came back, placid now and wavering over
three discordant tones. The tc'a were silent, but one, which babbled
static in tones as slow as the knnn's. The prisoner? she wondered.
Lamenting its fate? Beyond those voices there was only normal station
noise, and the close-in chatter of the skimmer crews who had never
ceased their work on The Pride's damage. Normally some of these jump
freighters would have put out: Hasatso's venture out only to meet
emergency had frozen everything. Not even the miners were stirring
out from their berths with the orehaulers and those were snugged into
orbit about Mala or Kilaunan. She patched a call through
to station services, complained about the late delivery on ordered
goods: the courier service issued promises after the time-honored
fashion, and she took them, reckoning on the usual carrier arriving
about the time the rampway was about to close down. Stasteburana-to used
sense, at least; and the patrols stayed out, shuttling the system,
alert against trouble. The mahe kept faith. She expected less of the
Tahar.
IX Moon Rising pulled out in
the off shift, a departure without word to them, in Pyanfar's night.
She ignored it, snarling an incoherency from out the bedclothes to
the com at bedside when she was advised, and pulling the cover back
over herself; it was not worth getting up to see, and she had no
courtesies to pay the Tahar, who deserted another hani to strangers,
crippled as they still sat. She was hardly surprised. Watch had their
standing orders, and there was no need to wake up and deal with it.
Hilfy slept: there was no need to rouse her out for what Hilfy also
expected. Pyanfar burrowed into sleep again and shed the matter from
her mind ... no getting her adrenalin up to rob herself of rest, no
thinking about here, or home, or anything in particular, only maybe
the repairs which were still proceeding, which ought to be virtually
finished by the time she waked, all the panels in place now, and mahe
working out on their tail checking all the sorry little connections
on which their lives relied. The dark took her back.
She snugged down with a feeling of rare luxury.
"Captain. Captain,
hate to disturb you, but we're getting some movement out of the
knnn." She thrust an arm about, felt after the time switch. An
hour and a half from wakeup. She kept moving, swinging her feet out. "Captain." That
was Tirun on watch. "Urgent." "I'm with you. Feed
it here. What's happening?" The screen lit in the
darkened cabin. Pyanfar blinked and rubbed her eyes and focused on
the schematic. Ship markers were blinking in hazard warning, too
close to each other for safety. "Every knnn at dock," Tirun
said. "They're breaking dock and the general direction -- " "After Moon Rising?
Query station. What's going on with them?" "Did, captain;
official no comment." "Rot their hides. Put
me through." It took a moment. Pyanfar
rummaged in the halflight from the screen after her breeches, pulled
them on and jerked the ties. "Station's still
refusing contact, captain: they insist communication by courier
only." Pyanfar tied the knot and
swallowed down a rush of temper. 'My regards to them. What are the
kif doing?" "Sitting still. If
they're talking to each other it's by runner or by line." "Just keep watching
it. I'm awake." She went to the bath, turned on the lights and
washed, walked out again and took a look at the situation on the
screen. Ten ships out of dock now, all chasing out after Moon Rising,
as if that same rotted knnn had gotten utterly muddled which hani was
which and convinced all the others -- ludicrous, absolutely
ludicrous; but humor failed her -- there had been misunderstandings
in the old days, before stsho had gotten the idea of the Compact
across to the tc'a, and the tc'a in turn had gotten the knnn and chi
to comprehend Compact civilization . . . enough to come and go in it
without trouble; to trade with it; to avoid collisions and
provocations and sometimes to cooperate. The methane-breathers were
dangerous when stirred. She frowned over the image, combed, cut off
the com and headed out down the corridor for the lift. "No change?" she
asked when she walked in on Tirun in op. "No change,"
Tirun said. Her injured leg was not propped, though thrust out at an
angle as she leaned to tap the screen. "They're all in a string,
all ten of them, all after the Tahar." "Gods," Pyanfar
muttered. "A mess." "They've got id
signals -- they have to know that's not us." Pyanfar shrugged
helplessly. She walked back to the door. "I'm going to get the
others. About time for you to go off, isn't it?" "Half an hour." "Who's up next?" "Haral." "So we start early."
Pyanfar walked out and down the corridor toward the large cabin that
was in-dock crew quarters, pushed the bar to open the door and
inside, the one that started dawn-cycle on the lights. "Up. Got
a little disturbance. Knnn have gone berserk. I don't want us abed if
they come this way." There was a general
stirring of blanketed bodies in the half-light, on a row of bunks
under the protective netting of the overhead; bunks and cots -- Tully
was at the left, curtained off, but not from her vantage, a tousled
head and bewildered stare from among the blankets -- and Hilfy . . .
Hilfy was on the other side of the room, stirring out with the rest,
naked as the rest, as Tully, who was getting out of bed on his side
of the curtain. Gods. Anger coursed her nerves, a distaste for this
upset in order which had swept The Pride. They voyaged celibate. In
her mind she could hear Tahar gossip -- something else that would be
told on Anuurn. And gods, she could see the look in Kohan's eyes. She
scowled. "Hilfy. Breakfast on watch, half an hour. Move!" "Aunt." Hilfy
stood up and jerked up her breeches with dispatch. Pyanfar stalked out,
headed back to the op room, shook off her distaste in self-reproach.
So Hilfy had resigned the privilege of guest quarters and snugged in
with the crew; she guessed why -- with the parting of ways with the
Faha. And the crew had invited: that was territory in which the
invitation came from inside and she did not intervene. In their eyes, I hen, Hilfy belonged. As they had taken Tully
in. Gods. Her nape prickled. "Breakfast and relief
is coming," she told Tirun as she arrived. "No change,"
Tirun said. "Same courses, all involved. Not a move from the
kif, not a word." "Huh." Pyanfar
sat down sideways on the counter. "Confused likewise. I hope." "They couldn't be in
communication with them." Tirun turned a disquieted stare toward
her. "I'm out of the
assumption market." The rout progressed, Moon
Rising proceeding outsystem with ii mahe escort at great distance and
a manic flood of knnn behind. "They're mad,"
Tirun said. Pyanfar sat and watched,
glaring at the screen. Haral arrived, with Hilfy
and breakfast; the others showed up hard on their heels, a
procession, Geran and Chur and Tully carrying their own trays.
"What's going on out there?" Haral asked. "Tahar," Tirun
said, "leading every scatterwitted knnn at the station -- " The screen had changed,
the dots parting on the scan, that which was Tahar going on, the
knnn. . . . "They're stopping,"
Hilfy said. "Wonderful,"
Pyanfar muttered, took up her cup of gfi and sipped it, watching as
the gap widened. Turnover eventually, she reckoned; the knnn
developed other plans. Tully spoke, a flood of alien babble, but she
had left the pager in her cabin. Chur turned hers to broadcast.
"Enemy ship," it rendered. "Knnn," Haral
said. "Not an enemy. Neutral. But trouble. That's Moon Rising.
The knnn followed them; now they've quit." "Why?" "Don't know, Tully." Moon Rising made jump, a
sudden wink off station scan -- knnnless. "Gods," Hilfy
exclaimed, as the knnn bent a turn. "Knnn maneuver,"
Tirun said. "The bastards are showing out. They can jump boost
and turn like that. It'd kill a hani. Any oxygen breather. Can't
outmaneuver them. Gods forbid, if we should have to shoot at one --
comp plotting can't hit one: not programmed for their moves." "They don't shoot at
us. They aren't armed." "In the old days,"
Haral said, "they never caught the knnn shooting either. But
ships turned up gutted. Before my time. But I heard they'd swarm a
ship, jump it elsewhere -- haul its mass off where they'd open it at
their leisure -- " "Haul it between
them?" Hilfy's face mirrored disbelief. "Among them. A dozen.
All synched. So I heard. Hani ships'd tear each other to junk; but
knnn can synch like that." "Huh," Pyanfar
said. It was an old bunk yarn, like ghost ships. Like aliens outside
the Compact. She stared at Tully and thought about that. Ate her
dried chips and washed it down with gfi. On com, station sent
instructions to its patrol to stay out of the way of the knnn. A tc'a
went on, presumably talking to the knnn. And a message light
blinked on their own board, something directed at them. Revise estimate, the
letters crept across the screen when Tirun keyed it. 75 hours repair
additional. Regret. Mahe more worker this job. Two team. Repeat ... "Gods help us."
Pyanfar snatched the mike and punched in station op. "What kind
of trouble this? What fifteen hours? Fifteen more hours?" Station routed the
complaint, one to the next, to the almost incomprehensible mahe
skimmer supervisor. "All skimmer station work," was the
answer, three times repeated, in rising volume, as if loudness
improved communication. "Thanks," Pyanfar muttered. "Out."
She ran a hand through her mane, put the mike down, looked around at
staring eyes and managed a better face. "Well," Haral
said in a quiet voice, "at least they found it before they sent
us out with it." "I'll go out the aft
lock," Geran said, "and check them out on it." "No," Pyanfar
said. "I don't doubt you'll find damage. Longshot it from the
observation dome. And by the gods, if there's something new I want to
know about it." She composed herself a moment. "No, gods
rot them, the mahe'd gouge us on fines and charges, but if I've got
the measure of that foreman she's not the type. Still... Do the check
anyhow." "Right." Geran
snatched up the tray and headed out, down the corridor for the bubble
access, a cold trip to the frame. Pyanfar thought of going herself,
delayed to finish her breakfast and watched the knnn, who had stopped
again, hovering off in utter violation of lanes and regulations.
Station operations reported a ship coming in, a mahendo'sat freighter
arriving in the zenith range: they had their own problems. So did the
mahen freighter, coming in to what should be a safe haven and finding
traffic snugged down and knnn gone berserk. "I'm going to main,"
she said finally. "Go off down here. Rest. Haral, I'll take it,
up there. I'll key you." "Captain -- "
Haral started to object, swallowed it, having a sense about such
things. "Right." Pyanfar walked out,
hitched up the trousers which had gotten too loose in recent days,
headed for the lift. Go in person to station offices and take the
place apart? It tempted. At the moment she wanted something breakable
within reach. But it would hardly mend matters. Fifteen hours. It was
hardly surprising; repairs for all of time and to all ends of the
Compact ran behind schedule and over estimate. And then it was
sixteen and seventeen and another twenty --
She took the lift up,
ensconced herself in her cushion on the bridge and sent rapid inquiry
through all appropriate channels. Defect vane yoke, the answer came
back from the station office, and hard upon that, from Geran: "Got
closeup; they've swarmed in on the vane collar, but I can't tell
much." The image came through, two skimmers and three workers in
eva-I pods grappled onto the afflicted vane where it attached to the
strut, cables and vane and strut strung with red hazard lights to
prevent accidents in shadow. It was a plausible repair, gods --
nothing cheap; the damage that had blown the panels loose could have
stressed it ... one of those systems for which there was no bypass,
through which a third of the power of the jump drive passed. "Yoke,"
Pyanfar sent to Geran, who was likely shivering her teeth loose in
the bubble. "Come on inship; there's no more we can do." It was a fifteen hour job.
A gnawing suspicion worked at her gut. The defect should have shown
up on the board: there were reasons why it might not -- that it had
blown as they camel in ... something had redlighted, so many things
had redlighted at one instant and gone back to normal status .
possibly, possibly it was real. Possibly too it was one of those
demon touches, the mahendo'sat called them, that lost ships,
something loose that contacted in stresses and killed. It was five to
five they owed the mahendo'sat crew profound thanks; or they were
being stalled, conned, set up. Check it now and ill was bound to
redlight: the casing was off. She sat staring at the vid screen with
her blood pressure up and a smoldering] rage with nowhere to send it. "Haral," she
said into com. "Captain?" "That problem you
fixed as we were coming in. Was the number one yoke involved? Could
you tell?" A long moment of silence.
"Captain, we were losing the input; I put in a new board and we
got it cleared. But that fade had stressed everything; the whole
board was fouled. I couldn't say beyond doubt. It was everywhere. I
thought it was the panels. I'm sorry, captain." There was misery in
Haral's voice. Haral was not accustomed to be wrong. Ever. "It's
one of those things," Pyanfar said, "that would redlight if
the panels were overloaded; I'm not so sure you were wrong, Haral.
I'm not at all sure you were wrong." "I'll go out there,"
Haral said. "And do what? They've
got it in a mess it takes skimmers to put back. Mahen skimmers. No.
We sit it out."
"Supplies arriving,"
Chur informed her eventually via com from belowdecks. That was frozen
fish off Kirdu IIs onworld ponds; and some stsho goods for Tully and
some more translator tapes. She checked the time; after their
originally scheduled departure. The courier service had been informed
of the delay as quickly as they had been, which insolence sent her
blood pressure up another several points. "Captain?" Chur
asked. "Noted," Pyanfar said coldly, and Chur broke the
contact.
Another hour. The vid
showed continual activity about the vane. Pyanfar diverted herself
into board maintenance, burrowed into under-console spaces, checked
and rechecked, surfaced now and again to dart a jaundiced look at the
vid or to listen to some communication coming in. The station was
getting back to normal; only the knnn . . . stayed out, fell into
systemic drift, wailing still to each other. The lift down the corridor
hummed and opened doors: Pyanfar heard that and worked her way out of
a finished job, stood up and wiped her hands and straightened her
mane -- soft quick footfalls in the corridor. "Aunt?" She sat down on the
armrest of her own cushion, scowled at her niece. Hilfy stood in the
archway with a paper in her hand, came and offered it. "Just
came. Couriered. Security seal." Pyanfar snatched it,
hooked a claw in it, ripped it open, nose wrinkling. Stasteburana's
signature. Greetings, respects, and the assurance all possible was
being done. "The stationmaster's compliments," Pyanfar
translated sourly. "We get escort to our jump point when we go;
departure's firm for that fifteenth hour. Rot them, they knew about
this, or they'd have been here asking for that tape. They want it, to
be sure -- before the job's sealed off. Is the courier waiting?" "No." "Rot them all." "Tully's tape, you
mean." She looked up at Hilfy,
whose adolescent-bearded held a hint of a frown. "Is that a
comment?" "No, aunt." "I told the Outsider
why." "Tully, aunt." Pyanfar sucked in a
breath. "Tully, if you please. I told him why. Did I get
through?" "He -- talked to Chur
about it." "What did he say?" "That he understood." "And the rest of
you?" Hilfy tucked her hands
behind under her brow. "He senses much trouble's going on. Last
offshift, he tried to talk to all of us, gods, how he tried. Finally
-- " Her ears went down, a second glance at the deck. "Finally
he put his arms around Chur and then he went j from one to the next
of us all and did the same, not -- male-female, not like that. Just
like he had something to say and he' didn't have any other way to say
it." Pyanfar said nothing, jaw
set. "He's started another
tape," Hilfy said. "The new manual." "Is he?" , "We gave it to him;
he sat down with it in op and he's feeding the words in as fast as he
can go." Pyanfar frowned, taken
aback. "He liked the stsho
shirts you came up with too. Warm, says, never mind the fancywork." "Huh." Pyanfar
thrust herself to her feet, poked an extended claw at Hilfy. "Nice
fellow, this Tully, so understanding and grateful and all. I've been
back and forth this route a few voyages, imp, and I've seen my share
of con artists. In the1 first place, since we bring it up, I don't
like the Outsider bedding down with the lot of you. I permitted it in
a moment of soft-headedness, because I didn't like his moping about
and I didn't want himself killing himself the way, mark you, imp, the
way he admits to killing a companion of his -- for friendship's
sake." "It's not fair to say
that. It was brave, what he did." "Granted. And maybe
he's got a few more brave notions. The crew's used to alien ways and
I figured they'd keep their judgment, but I don't like you down
there. Gods know you've earned the right to be down there -- that's
where I'd rather you were, all things equal, but they aren't; there's
that rotted Outsider in the company, and he makes me nervous, niece,
the way things make me nervous that just may blow up without warning.
I don't like you near him." Hilfy's ears were
plastered flat to her skull. "Pardon, aunt. If you order me to
go back to my quarters, I will." "No," Pyanfar
said. "I'll do you one worse. I'll rely on your sense. I'll just
tell you to think what gets blown to ruin if some triviality sets our
guest off at the wrong moment. Chanur, niece. You understand that?" The ears came up. Hilfy's
nose wrinkled all the same, the shot gone home. "I know I want
to get back to Anuurn, aunt; but I know too that I want to be proud
of one side of the family when I get there." Pyanfar raised her hand --
got that far with it, and stopped the blow and turned it into a
gesture of dismissal. "Out, imp. Out." Hilfy turned on her heel
and went. Pyanfar slid into the cushion and crumpled the
stationmaster's message with the other hand, punched claws through
it. Gods rot it, to have leaned on the youngster in that matter . . .
and to no point: to no point; underway, they would be back to wider
spaces, to -- gods knew what they would be up against. She reached and keyed
through the translator channel, heard Tully's steady input, jabbed it
out again. After a moment she shook
her head, smoothed out the paper and filed it in fax. Punched the
translator key on again and listened to Tully, a quiet, familiar
voice, putting word after word into memory.
Six hours; nine; twelve;
thirteen. The day passed in meals-at-station, in checks and
counterchecks; in enforced rest and secure-for-jump procedures and
most of all in monitoring scan and com. Pyanfar reached the stage of
pacing and fretting by the twelfth hour, fed and napped beyond
endurance -- wore off claw-tips on the flooring and disguised the
anxiety when any of the crew came near on errands. But Hilfy managed not to
come. Stayed below, in what frame of mind or what understanding
Pyanfar could not find a way to ask. "Courier's here."
Chur's voice cracked out of the silence on the bridge, com from
lowerdeck. "Asking the tape, captain.' "Ask the courier,"
Pyanfar said, "the finish time on the repair." A delay. "The courier says
within the hour, captain." "Understood."
Pyanfar caught her breath, looked left when she had laid the tape she
had prepared, reached and pocketed the cassette and headed out for
the lift, in such a fever that it was not till she had started the
lift downward that she had thought again what it was she went down to
trade: away from this place was all the thought; and the tape was a
means to get free; and the shedding of the whole ugly necessity
something she was only too glad to have done, to get The Pride free
o: mahendo'sat and loose and on her way. But Hilfy was down there.
That recollection hit her. The lift stopped, the door opened, and she
hesitated half a heartbeat in walking out, sucked up a breath she
wanted all too much to spend on the mahe for the delay, and strode
out quite bereft of the breath and the anger she wanted to loose. Tully. Ye gods, Tully was
in op too, off the corridor where any visitor to the ship not
confined to the airlock would be brought as a matter of course. She rounded the corner and
found a gathering indeed -- a dignified-looking mahe in a jeweled
collar and kilt; a mahe attendant; Haral, Tirun, and Hilfy. She
walked into the group suddenly conscious of her own informal attire,
scowled and drew herself up to all her stature -- none too tall in
mahendo'sat reckoning. "Bad mess," the
ranking mahe spat at her. "Big trouble you cause, hani. All same
we fix ship." The Voice of the
stationmaster, primed with accusations and bluster. The Voice looked
her up and down, with grand hauteur. Jeweled and perfumed. Pyanfar
flexed her claws, pointedly and with grander coolness turned her
shoulder and looked toward her own. "Tully. Where's Tully? Is he
still in op?" "You endanger the
station," the Voice railed on her dutifully. "Big trouble
with tc'a; knnn bastard kidnap and extortion. You want take with you
the eva-pod the knnn bring for trade for good tc'a citizen, hah? Got
your name on it, hani Pride of Chanur, clear letters." "Tully! Get your
rotted self out here. Now!" "They don't come into
station now, the knnn, no, make navigation hazard all this system.
All disturb. Mining stop. Trade stop. All business stand dead still.
You use knnn signal, a? Upset the knnn; take kif property, upset the
kif; get tc'a kidnap, tc'a upset; get fight stsho station, stsho make
charge; hani don't speak to you; -- what for we deal with you, hani,
a?" Tully came out of the op
room, Chur attending him. He had on his new stsho-made shirt, white
silk and blue borders -- looked immaculately civilized and no little
upset in the shouting. "The papers, Tully," Pyanfar said.
"Show them to this kind mahe." He fished in his pocket
for the folder, pale eyes anxious. "I got no need cursed
papers," the Voice snapped. Tully had them all the same, held
them open in front of the mahe, who waved them aside. "You issued them,"
Pyanfar said. "Property of the kif. Property of the kif, you
say. You look at this fine, this honest, this documented member of an
intelligent and civilized space-faring species and you talk about him
with words like property of the kif? I call down shame on you; I ask
you explain to him, you, in your own words, explain this property." The Voice flattened her
ears, looked aside at her attendant, who proffered a scent bottle. In
elaborate indirection the Voice unstopped it and inhaled,
recollecting herself in retreat. Her face when next she looked down
at them was tolerably mild. "The tapes," the
Voice said. "The tapes you make deal cover some damage." "All the damages. No
fines. No charges. No complaints." ' 'Starchaser rescue." "A separate matter.
Chanur and Faha together will stand good for it when we reach home.
As for the captain of the rescue ship, he has my guarantee, which is
worth more than his losses. It's settled." The Voice considered a
moment, nodded. "The tape," she said, holding out her hand.
"This give, repair finish. Give you safe escort. Fair deal,
Chanur." Pyanfar took it from her
pocket, an uncommon warmth about her ears -- looked aside at Tully.
She thrust it at him. "You give it. Yours." Hilfy opened her mouth to
say something, and shut it. Tully looked down at the cassette, looked
up at the Voice and hesitantly handed the tape toward her. "Friend,"
he said in the hani tongue. "Friend to mahe." The dark-furred hand
closed on the cassette. The Voice laid back her ears and pursed her
mouth in thoughtful consideration. Tully still had his hand out --
his own kind of gesture, who was always touching; kept it out. Slowly
the mahe reached out, alien protocol being her calling, and gamely
suffered Tully to clasp her hand, took it back without visible
flinching ... but with a subdued quiet unlike herself. She bowed her
head that slightest degree of courtesy. "I carry your word,"
she said. And with a scowl and a
glance at Pyanfar: "Undock one hour, firm. Kirdu Station give
you all possible help. Urge you give us location of this good fellow
homeworld -- danger to lose you, him, all, this trip." "Beyond the kif is
the location we presently suspect. Haven't had the time to learn,
honorable." "Stupid," the
Voice said with her professional license. "Our unfortunate
friend was dragged through miserable circumstances with the kif;
hurt; not stupid -- too wise to talk without understanding. Now
there's too little time. You help us get out of here and we'll settle
the kif sooner or later." "This hakkikt. . . .
Akukkakk. We know this one. Bad trouble, Chanur captain." "What do you know?"
Pyanfar asked, suddenly and not for the first time suspicious of
every mahe .at Kirdu. "What do you know about this kif?" "You undock one hour.
Skimmers go now. You make good quick voyage, Chanur captain." "What do you know
about the kif?" "Good voyage,"
the Voice pronounced, and bowed once and generally, collected her
attendant and walked for the airlock. "Hai," Pyanfar
said in vexation, and with a wave of her hand sent Haral striding
after the Voice and her companion. She looked about at Hilfy, whose
ears were somewhat down; and at Tirun and Chur and Tully. Tully
looked disquieted. "Good," Pyanfar said to him, clapping
him on the arm. "Good touch, that 'friend.' You laid the burden
on her, you know that? That's the Voice that speaks to and for the
Personage himself, the stationmaster of Kirdu; and by the gods you
did it, my clever, my mannerly Outsider, you threw that one right in
the stationmaster's lap." Tully glanced down, made a
small shrug, no less troubled-looking. She was not wearing the
translator plug. "An hour, hear?" she said to the others,
to Tirun and Hilfy and Chur -- and Geran, who would be keeping watch
in the op room with strangers running in and out of the ship: no way
it was unattended. "An hour and we're underway, out of here.
Home." "How are we doing it?" Geran called from out of
the room. "Stringing the jumps like before?" "Close as we can cut
it," Pyanfar said, and looked left as movement caught her eye,
Haral's return from the lock, as far as the beginning of the
corridor. "Seal us up,
captain?" Haral shouted down the corridor. "Seal us up,"
Pyanfar confirmed, and stopped in mid-wave as a tall dark figure
appeared in the corridor behind Haral "Ware!" Mahendo'sat. Haral had
already spun about, and the lanky, dark-furred mahe walked on in as
if he belonged, flashing a gilt-edged grin. "Ismehanan -- "
Pyanfar shouted. " -- Goldtooth, gods rot you, slinking into my
corridors without a by your leave -- Who let you in?" The grin in no wise
diminished. The mahe gave a sweeping bow and straightened as she
strode up to him. "Got sudden business, Chanur, maybe same you
course." "Whose business?" "Maybe same you
business." She swelled up with a
breath and looked up at him, hands in the back of her waistband.
"Maybe you talk straight, captain. Once." "Where you go?" "Maybe I should
broadcast it on the dock. For the kif." "Home, maybe? Ajir
route?" "Guess as you like." "Got Mahijiru weapons
first rate; friend mine make port today, also got number-one rig.
Wait over, Chanur." "Bastard!" He stepped back, held a
hand up, blunt-nailed; hers, lifted, was not. He grinned with the
fending gesture. "Necessity, time mahe shed cargo." "You egg-sucking
liars. Where I'm going has nothing to do with you; hani business, you
hear that? Private business. You want a quarrel with the kif you go
find your own." "Go home, do you?" "Private business,
I'm telling you." "Warn you,"
Goldtooth said. "Once. Maybe now go make deal hani port; lots
trade. You talk for your good friend there, yes?" "Goldtooth, what game
are you playing?" He grinned and turned on
his heel, walked off toward the lock, where Haral stood in scowling
indignation. "Goldtooth!" He paused to wave.
"Mahijiru you escort, captain. You got number one best." "Rot your hide, I'm
not playing decoy in some mahen game with the kif!" He was gone while the
echoes were still ringing. Haral, lacking orders, looked back at her,
and Pyanfar slung her arms to her sides, not reckoning on giving any.
It was the mahe's terms and there was nothing they could do to stop
him from following. "Seal that lock," she said. "Gods
know what else might get in." Haral went on the run. Pyanfar
looked about at the others, at Tully, and Chur and Hilfy and Tirun;
and Geran, who had stepped out of op. "Mahijiru's on,"
Geran said. "Someone's just hooked up a shielded line and we're
getting transmission. They claim they've got orders and they're
asking data." "We're going home,"
Pyanfar said shortly. "Home, by the gods. They've cost us time.
If Stasteburana's got notions of using us, rot him, two can play that
game. I'll give them our course; I'll give them a leadin inside the
Anuurn perimeter." "Chanur -- "
Tirun objected quietly. "More than Chanur's
got a stake in this. Maybe Anuurn needs to see that. We've got
ourselves trouble. Widespread trouble. We don't know how far it
stretches. There ought to be hani here, do you mark that? Lots of
hani ships coming and going here, not just Tahar. Here we are at one
of the prime stops on our rivals' route . . . and no hani ships but
that one. Homebound. I'll lay you odds, cousins, they've been staying
home when they've come to port. That's what's vacated the track we've
been on. Starchaser knew; word's been passing, at every port, every
contact." "Aye," Chur
murmured. "Aye. Gods. Six months they could have had at this --
" "I'm going to the
bridge. Bridge crew this passage -- Haral; Geran; Chur. The rest of
you take op station; and get Tully his sedative, now, before someone
forgets." "Aunt!" Hilfy
called after her. Pyanfar stopped and turned. "Captain,"
Hilfy said in a quieter voice. "Question?"
Pyanfar asked, scowling. Hilfy's chin went up. "No, captain, "
Hilfy said quite steadily. Pyanfar nodded, with a small tightening of
the mouth, looked satisfaction into Hilfy's clear eyes, then turned
again and strode off to the lift. Down the corridor, the
lock boomed shut. The Pride had begun her separation.
X "Getting pickup on
the companion," Chur said, snugged in com station. "They
swear it's a secure line." "Huh." Pyanfar
finished up the checks and reached for the contact flashing on her
com module. "Chanur here." "Introduce you,"
Goldtooth's voice came back to her. "Captain Pyanfar Chanur, got
link to Aja Jin. Captain Nomesteturjai." "Chanur," a
voice rumbled back. "Name Jik, here." "Number one fellow,
Jik," Goldtooth said. "Honest same you, Pyanfar Chanur." "Honest like stall me
off; like delay me. Chanur's fighting for its life, you rag-eared
bastard, does that get through your head? Challenge; and I'm not
there. In your spying about, do you know what that means?" "Ah," Goldtooth
said. "Know this trouble. Yes." Pyanfar said nothing,
forced the claws back in. "Know where this
Akukkakk too," Goldtooth said. "Interested, hani captain?" "After I've settled
my own business." "Same place." "Anuurn?" "Keep you alive,
hani. We make slow maybe, but you make deal we want. More big than
pearls and welders, a, hani?" "You follow, rot
you." She keyed through the course and the graph on comp.
"There's the way." A mahen hiss came back,
throaty and rueful. "You steer by luck, hani? You crazy mad,
that course?" "Do it all the time,
mahe. Scare you?" "Hani joke, a?" "Got two kif docked
down there. We go, they'll go. You got that patrol alerted?" "Got," came that
second voice. "Ha," Pyanfar
muttered. "You got your data; got all you want. Enough. We're
getting out of here." "A." Assent. Pyanfar flung a
glance toward Haral, across the separating console, and the contact
went out. Chur flicked signals to the dock crew. "Got us
prioritied out," Chur reported. "No problem." The
lines were coming loose. Telltales began to flash, wanting ports
sealed. Haral put the seals in function, straight down the sequence.
Screens in front of number one post livened, Geran routing through
the station scan image. The airlock grapple clanged into unlock, and
the last of the seal-ports was firm. "Moving out," Pyanfar
warned over allship, and cleared The Pride's own grapples, her grip
on station independent of the station's grip on her: those boomed
into the housing, and undocking jets eased them clear. It was a smooth parting,
an easy push clear and a nosing toward an untrafficked nadir as g
started up, a whine of the rotational engines. Comp flashed them
their lane, and scan showed Mahijiru and Aja Jin moving down below
the station rim off portside. The Pride gathered momentum, a solid g
and a half now, outbound. "Kif are breaking
free," Chur said, com monitor. "Station advises." "No scan
confirmation," Geran said. Pyanfar was already
reaching for the shielded weapons switch, uncapped it and flicked it
on: a ripple of lights advised the gunports were clearing. "Stay
on that," she told Haral without taking her eyes off her own
business. "No comp synch, not with the mahe in the way. Can't be
taking one of them by mistake." "Hope they're as
considerate," Haral muttered. "Huh." "Kif are moving out,"
Geran said. "Number two screen." "Where's our escort?"
Pyanfar wondered glumly. " -- Op deck, stay braced. Listen in
and take your cues." "Escort moving,"
Chur said. "They're on intercept; station's got them
scan-blanked." "Understood."
She darted a look at station-sent scan, on which they themselves
showed as an oversized wedge, massed blip of ships in synch. Geran
sent another image. G continued, dragging at the gut, straining her
arm back against the elbow brace. The kif were not gaining, were
maintaining a sedate acceleration in their wake. Goldtooth and this
stranger Jik: escort. She did not, she admitted to herself,
understand the mahen order of things, no more than outsiders
understood the stsho. Trading with them was one thing. Figuring out
the limits of a mahe like Stasteburana was another. Goldtooth and
this mahe friend of his, this ship which had come kiting into system
in the hour of Tahar's exit -- merchanters, maybe; but what she saw
of Mahijiru and Aja Jin on vid was ominously lean, ominously trim
with their cargo holds stripped off; a lot of space given to the
power assembly on those two, a profligate lot of jump capacity masked
by those missing holds, odd-shaped cores swelling in such fashion
that they would cut into any reasonable geometry of tanks which had
been strapped on. Vanes with strange dark interstices, like folding
joints, vanes larger than ships of their mass ought to carry. It was
a curious thing, that ships never saw "ach other; that they
nosed up to station and stayed invisible behind station walls; that
they existed as blips and dots and figures in comp, moving too fast
for vid to pick up. Only now that they were in synch, a package
moving at the same velocity and in sight of each other --
"Runner ships,"
Pyanfar muttered to Haral. "Look at our escort, cousin." "Got that,"
Haral said quietly. "Got that, Captain." Something new among the
mahendo'sat. Something which had to have been very quiet for a long
time. Ships like the kif runners. Hunter ships. Her mustache-hairs
drew taut as if her nose had picked up something. Gods: Mahijiru, out
prowling about Meetpoint, out on the fringes of stsho space --
Hunting rumors? A crew
lounging on the dock, loud and visible with repair they could have
done inside as well. Two sets of hunters on the docks besides the kif
themselves, and they had come sniffing round each other, each so
cleverly assaying the other, she and the mahe --
"That goldtoothed
bastard knew something," Pyanfar said. "From the very start
he knew. Knew this Akukkakk; knew those kif ships; knew what was
stirring out here." Haral shot her a
disquieted look. "Knnn," Geran
said suddenly; and vid went off and another image came in, sectorized
on the mass of knnn ships, which were no longer stationary. "Gods," Chur
muttered, "here we go." "Never mind the
rotted knnn," Pyanfar said. "Watch the kif; op, take that
sectorized image and keep us posted." It vanished from her
screen; Tirun acknowledged recept below. Behind them, on the image
which turned up, the kif started now to move. "Got us knnn,"
Goldtooth's voice cut in, transferred from Chur's board. "Nuisance,"
Pyanfar said. "You know more than that, mahe? What more do you
know? About how you were hunting trouble at Meetpoint?" "Got no need hunt.
Hani in port." "Captain."
Tirun's voice. "Decreased interval." She was watching it.
Flexed her claws carefully on the togglegrip. "Moving out,"
she told the mahe. "Going to boost up and test; clear my field,
understand? No more time here." "A." She moved the control. The
Pride kicked up to widen the interval between herself and the mahe.
The number one screen flicked from scan to a bracketed star; the
images shifted one screen over and dumped the vid entirely. On scan
the kif fell farther and farther behind, chancing nothing with the
patrol. And the knnn -- the knnn
streamed along in a manic flood, accelerating as they went, a few
points off their course. "Interval achieved,"
Haral said. "Boosting up,"
Pyanfar warned the others. She hit the jump pulse, lightly, swallowed
against the queasiness and saw the instruments sorting themselves out
at the new velocity. "Clear," Haral
said. "All stable. Coming up on jump." "Stand by the long
one," Pyanfar advised the crew below. Cast a last and frantic
look at scan, where Mahijiru and Aja Jin had fallen behind on
estimated-position. No communication possible now: they were too much
lag apart. It was the position she wanted, the mahe running at their
tail: their nose they could take care of themselves. Best to flare
through any ambush where they were going and not be the second or
third ship in, as Starchaser had been at Kita, after the nest had
been stirred and the kif wakened. Luck, she wished the mahe.
In spite of other things. In spite of deceits; in spite of mahen
purposes which had nothing to do with hers. Luck, she thought; and:
conniving liar. The course was flashing on
the screen, a jump first for Ajir System, and through it to
Anuurn itself, the straightest course and the most vulnerable to
ambush; but they were out of time for finesse. "Ready," she
warned the crew. They reached their point.
Mahijiru would be after them, gliding on their tail; and Aja Jin,
that other of Goldtooth's ilk. ...
... all the way. A wail from com as they
came up, a buoy, Ajir marker dopplered into nonsense.
Mahendo'sat/hani cooperative, this station, full of traffic and
hazards in the jump range for a lunatic chase to come streaking
through, velocity unchecked: a second time to try the maneuver that
had failed at Kita, had failed, with damage to the ship. Gods help
any other incomer who chanced to be in the way. ALERTALERTALERT, The Pride
wailed, capsuled transmission: mahe escort behind. Likely hostile
action. Beware of kif insystem and out. Launch all system defense.
Take precaution. Two ships following us are escort. Next is trouble.
Casualties in previous attacks: Handur's Voyager; Faha's Starchaser.
Kif attack on non-Compact unarmed ship, three alien casualties.
ALERTALERTALERT. . . . Chaos would break loose at
Ajir: kif at dock might take exception to it; Handur might be here to
hear it; and Faha. If the kif were not
waiting here, in ambush already. . .
The mass that was Ajir, a
yellow sun, loomed ahead: Ajir, askew from most stars of the region,
wearing its belt of worlds and debris rakishly aslant -- hazard,
Pyanfar's memory kept warning her, distant and fogged in the muddle
of postjump, of extreme velocities and instruments feeding them only
the skim of reality, too fast, too fast. . . . "Where is it?"
she asked of Haral -- for the gods' sakes, homestar ... a blind
newborn could sense it from Ajir, could feel it, head for it however
shaken in jump: their bow was toward it. "Locked on,"
Haral's slow voice purred through the madness, slow, when they were
pushing c and the system was whipping past in unreality, moving while
they drifted through movements: one dopplered star was clear for
them, zeroed in the brackets, and all the rest had gone mad. . . . Home.
Weeks, in the time/notime
of jump. ... They were in. Hard to
think, to begin the dump sequences. The ship would take over when
manual intervention failed utterly; would dump velocity and glide
them to an outsystem halt, still within return range. Easier to let
it slide, let the system blur past, let the machinery take over --
No. They were on manual
override from the last one. Machine-rules were already violated.
Pyanfar lifted the arm, saw with her dazed vision Haral, who had
begun the same desperate struggle, slow and sickly in the aftermath
of their arrival. A warning light was blinking, not the same
malfunction, but outside alert: com recept -- beacon- They dumped down and went
totally blind for an instant. Anuurn beacon welcomed them out of it;
their own alert was still going, crying havoc where they went. She
got her hand up, signaled Chur with a blinker; after an interminable
moment it went out. Second dump. There was
Tully's voice over the open com; and Hilfy's comforting him -- Hilfy,
who not so long ago had ridden sickly through the jumps, and now
steadied their passenger. "Getting image,"
Geran said. "There are ships out here." None in their way: Geran
would not be so calm. They were zenith of everything and everyone. "Getting course
input," Haral said; and the screen shifted, lines blinking and
calling for matchup, the lane assignment from the buoy. Third dump. Pyanfar
swallowed heavily and looked at scan again as it sorted itself out.
"Image aft," Geran said: it went to number two screen.
Mahijiru. The wavefront was running up their backsides, where that
ship and its partner were aimed if they delayed dump. "Too close, mahe,"
Pyanfar muttered. Final dump. They hit
course, down the slot and true, on Kilan Station's guidance.
"Transmit intent to dock at Gaohn," Pyanfar said: that was
the innermost of the two stations of Ahr System, that about Anuurn
itself. The signal went out: the acknowledgment flashed back from one
of the robot buoys, automatic routing, approach as routine as any
incoming merchanter. "Dump behind us,"
Chur said. "Second arrival; both our I friends are in." "Transmit
instructions to ignore routing and stay on our tail. Give them a
signal." "Station scan,"
Geran said, "is showing a lot of ships. A lot of ships." Pyanfar looked. Six major
planets about Ahr: Gohin; Anuurn itself; Tyo; Tyar; Tyri and Anfas --
with assorted moons, rings and planetoids. Anuurn alone was
comfortably habitable; and Gaohn Station circled it; and there was
Kilan Station which supported the little colony on Tyo. There was
always traffic. Hani were not the colonists that mahendo'sat"
and stsho and even knnn tended to be: but here, in home-system, there
was always traffic, from little ships which plied the system to the
greater ones which jumped in from other stars; there was the huge
null-g shipyard of Harn Station, where all hani ships were born and
where they came for refitting and repair. But there were twice the
usual number, easily twice, ships in offlanes positions, waiting;
ships in clusters; ships by groups of four and five. "I don't
like that," Haral said. "Not all ours,"
Pyanfar said. And after a moment: "He's here. Goldtooth said it;
the kif at Kirdu said it. Hinukku's come here. After revenge." No one said anything. The
minutes crept up on the chronometer. The Pride was sending her own
signal, computer talking to computer. A telltale flashed and a signal
came over com. "Mahijiru," Chur said. "Aja Jin, Both
moving up on our track." "Blink them a
comeahead," Pyanfar said. "Tightbeam; nothing more." "Permission to move
about," Tirun sent from lowerdeck. "Denied. Got a situation
here. Stay put." "Understood," Tirun answered. Chur leaned down, opened
the cabinet by her post and brought out a bottle, sucked a bit from
it and passed it on; it went to Geran and to Haral; finally into
Pyanfar's hand with an exact quarter visible through the opaque
plastic. She sipped at it, her mouth like paper and tasting days
stale; her hand left shed fur on the moist bottle when she dropped it
into the wasteholder. The salt and the moisture helped, took some of
the shakes from her limbs. There was still a misery in her back and
in her joints, a tendency for her eyes to blur. Not easy on the body,
double-skipping. Bodies were not designed for such abuses. She
thought of docking, of having to walk about, to deal with possible
trouble --
To get a shuttle and to
get downworld with all else hovering about them. . . . Something clenched about
her gut, protesting. She looked at scan, their own, tight scan,
number four screen, where a friendly blip was moving up into
intercept. Another blip showed on the edge of the screen. "Got synch,"
Goldtooth's voice came through. "Jik come up otherside." "Got too many ships,"
Pyanfar said, signaling Chur to put the transmission through. "Want
you where you are, mahe." A mahen chuckle. "A." "Rot your hide." She shut it down. "Got station
contact," Chur said. "They don't say anything out of the
way; normal approach instructions." "Three berths,"
Pyanfar said. "Together. Tell them to clear something if they
don't have it. Talk them into it." It was a long interval.
They still had lagtime from station. "Stationmaster," Chur
said finally, "intervened to grant it. We've got twenty through
twenty-two." "Comment?" "Nothing," Chur
reported. Trouble. Pyanfar's ears
flicked. If they could demand ships shunted about and get their
request it was because they had a right to it; and if they had a
right to it, then there was an emergency in progress. Homecoming kin
had right-of-way . . . in situations of death; of challenge; of
disasters. "System's quiet,"
Chur reported. "I'm not getting idle chatter. They're not
volunteering any information, captain." "Kif," Pyanfar
said. "Outsiders present." Tully said something from
belowdecks. Went silent. Hilfy's voice followed, talking to him, low
and urgent. "Let's not have any
panic down there," Pyanfar said. "Tully. Quiet. Take
orders, hear?" "Understand,"
Tully said. The minutes crawled past.
Jik's Aja Jin came into position, so that The Pride went flanked by
the mahe. "Goldtooth," Pyanfar said. "You
come onstation with me; want your friend stay out of dock and watch,
a?" "A," the answer
came back, short and sweet; from Jik no word. He would do it, Pyanfar
thought. Station was sending specific instructions: Haral was
attending that, inputting it for comp. She hit the shunt which dumped
the data onto Haral's screens, with a blinking warning that control
of the ship came with it: Haral nodded, accepting it without missing
a keystroke. Pyanfar loosed her restraints, swung her cushion about
and assayed to get her feet under her. "Get to the bridge,"
she told those below, leaning over com. "Aye," Tirun sent
back. Pyanfar walked about a bit, unsteady on her feet, bent down
enough to get some of the dried food out of storage by her own
console. Chips and bottles of salts. She opened them, put them in
reach of Haral and Geran and Chur, chewed on a bit of dried meat and
washed it down with half a bottle of the liquid. Dehydrated. The
jumps took some time off bodies. She walked about trying to get the
needling pains out of her joints, heard the lift in function and then
steps coming down the corridors. "Captain." Knnn-song wailed out of
com. "Gods and thunders!"
Pyanfar spat. "Location on that." "Ahead of us,"
Geran said. "One of those ships moving up on station." Tirun and Hilfy and Tully
had arrived, stood together in the archway which opened onto the
bridge, silent in the grating sound which ran the scale. Knnn never called at
Anuurn. Never, till now. "It overjumped us,"
Pyanfar said with -- she reckoned -- commendable calm. "If
that's our knnn, it just overjumped us by at least an hour." "Fast bastard,"
Tirun muttered. "Mahijiru," Chur
said, "asks if we notice." "Cut that thing off,"
Pyanfar said. "Tell Mahijiru yes, we did notice." She
pricked up her ears with an effort, flicking the rings into order on
the left. "Hilfy. Tully's channel." Hilfy turned her pager
onto broadcast. "Tully -- we're home now. Anuurn. Got trouble
here." "Kif," Tully
said. "I hear. Hani -- make deal with them?" "Papers,"
Pyanfar said sharply, and when Tully's hand went to his left pocket:
"You keep those with you. You're registered; you've got a number
in the Compact. No. No way the kif can take you by law. Going to have
one lot of mad kif, maybe; maybe some mad hani. But they can't take
you, except by force." "Fight them." "You take my orders.
My crew, my orders." "Pyanfar." Tully
thrust out his hand to stop her from turning away. "I don't go
from you." Pyanfar flattened her
ears, staring up into Tully's pale, distraught eyes. "I don't
need someone making me conditions. You do what I tell you." "Do. Yes. I go on
this ship. With you. #### give ### hani I quick dead." "We've got troubles
enough, Outsider. Hani troubles as well as kif. Let be." "With you. Long time
voyage. With you." "I'm not your kin,
rot you. You come on my ship, you make me trouble -- what in a Mahen
hell do I owe you?" "Dead, outside. Need
you." "Huh." Male. The
shout left a quiet after it. Alien male, but all the same she saw the
line drawn, the edge past which there was no thinking . . . their
patient, docile Outsider. She cuffed his arm, claws not quite pulled.
"You listen, friend Tully; you think, rot your hide. We go off
this ship; we; you; we come back, you come back with us. Hear?" "Come with you?" "I say it." He flung his arms about
her; sweaty, reeking as he was, as they both were, he hugged her with
abandon. She freed one arm and the other and shoved him off in
indignation, which in no wise changed the look in his eyes. "Do all you say,"
he said. "By the gods you'll
do it. You do something wrong and I'll notch your ears for you. You
keep that brain of yours working or I'll rattle it like a gourd. Can
you do that? Can you look at a kif and not go crazy?" That took a moment's
thought. He nodded then. "Get them other time," he said
confidently, waved a hand toward the wide infinite. "We go find
kif other time pull their heads off." The mangled extravagance
appealed to her; he did, with his clear-eyed insanity. She cuffed him
harder and got a moment's shock, not temper -- like Khym, like her
own easygoing Khym, where Kohan would have swung and cursed at the
sting. She was reassured, that he was capable of restraint, that a
cuff on the ears stood a chance of getting his attention; that
blunt-fingered and slender as he was, a couple of them could hold him
if they had to. "If we get out of this," she promised him,
"we go skin some kif. Next trip out. I take you with me." That was premature. They
owned nothing to give away, least of all the disposition of the
Outsider. Lose Chanur, she thought with a chill, and they could make
no more promises at all; but confidence burned in Tully's eyes, a
trust that he was theirs. Gods. Theirs. Theirs for
managing, for using, for finding the location of his distant people
before the mahendo'sat or the kif could do so, and making a wedge for
Chanur trade. But it was Hilfy's kind of a look he gave her. Worship
... not quite. Absolute belief. She looked at Hilfy to be sure and
found the same. Looked disquietedly at the others, at Haral and Geran
and Chur and Tirun, who had their own rights on this ship which was
theirs as well as hers, who had been here longer and knew better and
had to know what the odds were. It was there too -- quieter, but as
crazily trusting. She talked about going kif-hunting and they gave
her that kind of stare. "Keep it sane in
here," she said. "I'm going to clean up. Tully, for the
gods' sake, bathe." She stalked out. The Pride
streaked on toward station. She had no least doubt that some of those
ships out there were kif, and that there was at least the remote
possibility that the kif might face about and start a run at them in
some berserk notion of revenge. If this Akukkakk saw no
other possibility, he might. But his presence here, before her,
indicated that he knew that she had to come here; and why; and that
he had a chance of revenge far wider than one ship, a handful of
deaths. It was Chanur he was
aiming at. His information was accurate enough to have brought him
here. Somewhere, hani had talked; and he knew where to put the
pressure on. Faha, she thought
unworthily, but the suspicion nagged at her. If not the Faha, others,
who had talked too freely at some dock or -- gods help them -- Handur
prisoners, taken alive at Meetpoint. She doubted the latter: the
destruction had been thorough: and Goldtooth denied the chance of
survivors. But someone, somewhere -- had said enough in the wrong
hearing. She put the thought away. It was too bitter.
She wore the red this
time, red silk breeches and the best of her rings and the pendant
pearl. Appearances. She combed and brushed until her mane and her
beard gleamed red gold highlights. She splashed on perfume, reckoned
that some sweeter scent would hardly hurt Tully, and pocketed one of
several vials in the drawer. For Hilfy she pocketed
something too. She went back to the bridge then, distracted herself
with current reports on their approach -- Hilfy was not there, nor
were Tully or Geran or Chur, but Tirun had taken the number three
cushion next Haral. "No trouble," Pyanfar observed. "Routine so far,"
Haral said. "I'll take it. Your
turn." Pyanfar slid in at her place and Haral slid out of hers,
weary and staggering in the use of cramped muscles. "Getting some kif
transmission," Tirun said after a moment. "Operational.
They know we're here. Nothing more said." "How many of them, do
you reckon?" "Station's given us
an accurate count. Seven." "Gods have mercy." "Aye." Pyanfar shook her head and
called up the various images available to her screens. They were
coming in under automatic at present, locked on station's guidance.
Vid image filled one screen, Anuurn itself, blue and marbled with
cloud. Beautiful. It was always beautiful on approach, never so
spectacular as Urtur, but full of life. It conjured blue skies; and
grassy\plains and broad rivers and vast seas; it conjured colors; and
scents; and textures; and a gut feeling which was different than all
other words ... for hani. She watched at her
leisure: with The Pride under automatic there was little else to do.
A sweep of their second vid camera showed their mahen escorts riding
slightly aft, two sleek killers, so precise in position they might
have been one single ship. "Aja Jin advises
he'll drop back to guard as we go in," Tirun said. "Understood." "Still picking up
signal from that knnn. Tried the translator on it. I get nothing but
a docking matchup, aside from the singing." "They docked?" "Quarter hour ago.
Gods know what station's going to do with them. No facilities except
the emergency hookup. I don't get any outside transmission on that
problem." "Huh." "Not a word from
anyone else in system. Unnatural quiet." "Kif docked?" "All seven." "Thank the gods for
that. You sure?" "Station's word on
it." Pyanfar laid her ears
back, scowled. It was too cooperative all round, kif who put into
station . . . something was crooked here. Badly out of trim. It was
far too late to turn about. And there was Kohan and all of Chanur
below, who had no such options to turn and run. Therefore The Pride
did not. "Station requests all
weapons shielded." Pyanfar considered a
moment, reached to the board and complied. "Done," she
said, wishing otherwise. Presumably Mahijiru did the same. Aja Jin
had dropped behind them now, in a defensive position at their
vulnerable tails. "Got plan?"
Goldtooth's voice reached her ears then, transferred from Tirun's
board. "Want you with me
when we go out," she said. "You understand hani station
rules. Know them all?" "All," Goldtooth
confirmed. "See you on the
dock." Weapons, she meant to say:
hani stations observed no weapons-rules. It was not a thing she
wanted to discuss on com. She trusted that the mahe would turn up
armed. It was certain the kif would.
XI Automation took them in to
the last, trued to the cone. It was an easy dock. The grapples
touched and locked on both sides. The instruction came up to access
the line ports; declined, she sent back, refusing that mandated
service. It was not likely, considering the circumstances, that
station would quibble. No objection came back, only a pressure
reading for the station itself and a recommendation to use the ah-
shunt in the lock. "They know it's
trouble," Pyanfar muttered. "Tirun, someone's got to stay
aboard. You're it; you and Geran. Sorry." "Aye," Tirun
muttered unhappily. No discussion. "Shall I page Geran and
advise her?" "Do that." "Want both of you
fit. If we can't get back, take command, your own discretion. Take
the ship and get out of here, pick up crew at Kirdu -- mahendo'sat or
anything else; and make it count, hear me?" Tirun's ears went down.
"You're not planning on it." "Gods no, I'm not
planning on it. But if, if, old friend. If we lose -- in any sense --
neither hani nor kif sets hand to The Pride. That's firm." "That's firm,"
Tirun said. "Tully -- our problem or yours?" "Mine," Pyanfar
said. "He's walking evidence. And more problem than you need.
You've got that tape; you've got an ally in the Kirdu stationmaster
if it comes to that. I don't leave you any instructions. If something
goes wrong, make up your own rules." "Right," Tirun
said. The order split the
sister-teams down the middle. If it came to that -- Tirun and Geran
would be a wounded half. But that was the way it went: she wanted
Haral's size and strength with her, and Tirun was hardly fit for a
fight. Chur was the smallest of the lot, but of the two remaining,
the meanest temper. Pyanfar extended her hand in rising, pressed
Tirun's shoulder. Practicalities. Tirun knew.
They gathered belowdecks,
all of them, clean and combed, excepting Tirun, who had never gotten
her turn at washing up: Tully wore a white stsho shirt belted
hiplength about him, and a better pair of blue breeches -- Haral's
likely, who had been sharing clothes with him. Pyanfar looked the
party over; and remembering the perfume in her pocket, took it out
and tossed it at Tully. "All things help," she said. Tully
unstopped it and sniffed, wrinkled his nose and looked doubtful, but
when she j mimed putting it on, he splashed some on his hand and
wiped I his beard and his throat. He coughed, and thrust the bottle
into his own pocket. "Another matter,"
Pyanfar said, and took a fine gold ring from the depth of her
lefthand pocket, offered it to Hilfy and had the satisfaction of
seeing the look in Hilfy's eyes. "I won't take you anywhere
ringless. If we meet some kif, or even politer company -- you'd
better look like where you come from, hear, imp?" "Thank you,"
Hilfy said, looked uncertain with it, and flustered; but Geran tugged
her head over on the spot and bit a I neat place for it, deftly
thrust the earring through for her and fastened it. "Huh,"
Pyanfar said, there being her niece with I her first gold shining in
her ear and pride glowing in her eyes, j "Come on. Let's find
out what's waiting out there. -- Tirun, Geran, you keep that lock
sealed for everyone but us, no matter how bad it gets to sound, no
matter what they offer you. Get on the com in op. Tell Goldtooth to
get moving." "Aye," Tirun
said. Neither Tirun nor Geran was pleased with the unship assignment
-- Geran was trying to be cheerful, and not well succeeding: "Take
care," Geran said, patted Chur's shoulder. "Luck,"
Tirun said, last, and Pyanfar nodded to the others and walked with
them down the corridor, leaving Tirun and Geran to get to business:
she and Haral and Chur, and Hilfy; and Tully, who looked back, when
none of the rest of them did, with a forlorn expression. Pyanfar went first into
the airlock, waited for Tully, hand on the hardness of the pistol she
had in her pocket -- as all of them had but Tully; he hurried in with
them and Haral closed the inner hatch. One further insane moment
Pyanfar debated with herself, then made up her mind and opened the
locker by the outer hatch, took out the pistol they kept there and
gave it to Tully. "Pocket," she said when he looked anxious
surprise at her. "Pocket. Don't touch it. Don't think about it.
If / fire, you can, hear? If you see me shoot, then you shoot. But I
won't. It's civilized here. Hani don't take nonsense from the kif and
kif know that. If the kif get nasty they find themselves more hani
than they know how to run from. Promise you. You draw that at the
wrong time and I'll skin you." "Understand,"
Tully said fervently. He thrust the pistol into his pocket and put
his hands demonstratively in his belt at his back. "I take
orders. I don't make mistake." "Huh." She
touched the bar. The airlock's outer seal opened for them and her
ears popped with the pressure change as the cold air of dockside
sucked through the access tube. Sounds outside echoed, nothing out of
the ordinary. Pyanfar led the way onto the ramp way plates, around
the curve and down toward the grayness of the dockside, with all its
metal and machinery. The translator was out of
pickup range now: Tully became effectively deaf and mute. Pyanfar
looked askance at him as they walked out the arch of the farside
lock, onto the dockside itself. He was sticking close to Chur and
Hilfy, or they to him, while Haral brought up the rear, tall and
solid and looking like business with her scars and her be-ringed left
ear. Haral had instinctively planted herself back there to guard the
rear and quite possibly to head off Tully if he should lose his head.
The latter was not likely, Pyanfar thought with some assurance. Old
hunter that she was, she had some sense which way things would dart
in a crisis, and she had Tully figured for the other direction. She
directed her attention sharply ahead, where dockworkers had set up
cord barriers -- where a station official, Llun house or one of half
a dozen other Protected families which kept the station, made her
body the gateway, guard enough for a hani station, where civilized
folk knew what they would touch off if they harried a warder
representing her family and her family's post. Llun, that guard, if the
set of the ears was any true indication, a mature hani in the black
breeches of officialdom immemorial. The Llun drew a paper from her
belt as they approached her, and offered it, not without an ears-down
look at Tully: but the Llun kept her dignity all the same. "Ker Chanur, you're requested
for Gathering in the main meeting area. You're held responsible for
all the others of your party; it's assumed the mahen ship is under
your escort." "Accepted,"
Pyanfar said, taking the paper. The Llun moved aside then to let them
pass, impeccable in her neutrality. A little distance away, at the
next berth, a similar barrier was set up about Mahijiru's access.
"Come," Pyanfar said to the others, and walked in that
direction, took the chance to scan the official summons. "Charges
filed," she said. "Compact violations and piracy." "Rot them," Chur
muttered. "We're going to get
that shelved," Pyanfar said, looked up again and let her jaw
drop as Goldtooth led a good number of mahe down onto the dock, a
Goldtooth resplendent in dark red collar and kilt, glittering with
mahen decorations. "By the gods, look at him." "Merchanter,"
Haral spat. "And I'm kif." "Come on,"
Pyanfar said to her company. Goldtooth offered his papers to the hani
on guard, but the guard waved him through unquestioned; the mahe and
his crew walked out to join her in the walk toward the main dockside
entry, a towering dark crowd of mahendo'sat. Sidearms, openly
carried, businesslike heavy pistols strapped to the right leg.
Decorations, worn by more than one of the group. "Where we go?"
Goldtooth asked. "Gathering. Ihi.
Place where we sort things out. Hani law here, mahe. Civilized." "Got kif here,"
Goldtooth muttered. "Got Jik watch our tail." They entered the corridor.
It stretched ahead, polished, clean, uncommonly vacant. No young ones
about, precious few of anyone except officials in uniform, a very few
hani dressed like spacers, who watched in silence and stepped well
aside. "Too few," one
of the mahe observed. Goldtooth made a low sound, uninformative. "Too rotted few,"
Pyanfar said. She turned a necessary corner, saw the doors of the
meeting hall ahead, double-guarded. She took no more thought of her
companions then, of mahe or Outsider or kinswomen, flicked her ears
to settle the rings in place and waved a grand gesture to the
black-trousered hani who stood there. "Chanur," one
said. The doors whisked open, and a milling, noisy crowd of hani were
gathered beyond -- a crowd which retreated in growing quiet as they
swept into the room. Pyanfar stopped in the midst, hands in her belt,
looked toward the Cardinal point of the room, at the station
authorities who gathered there, at Llun and Khai and Nuurun, Sahan
and Maura and Quna, evident by their position and by the posted
Colors in front of which they stood. And kif, to their right, a
cluster of black robes. A pair of stsho. Pyanfar's nose wrinkled and
her ears flattened, but she lifted them again as she faced the Llun,
who stood centermost and prominent among the station families. She
held up the paper and proffered it for a page who retrieved it and
took it to the Llun senior. "Chanur requests
transport downworld," Pyanfar said quietly. "Our claim has
precedence over any litigation." The Llun senior -- Kifas
Llun herself, broad and solid and unmistakable in her gold and her
dignity, unhurriedly took the paper, thrust it into her belt, and
looked again at Pyanfar. "A complaint of piracy has been filed
by Compact law; by treaty, this station has obligations which have
precedence." "The rights of a
family when questioned bear on treaty law and define the han. Our
place is in question." The Llun hesitated, mouth
taut. "Challenge hasn't yet been issued." "Yet. But it will be
now -- won't it, her Kifas? You know it; and I know it; and there are
those here flatly counting on it. Point of equity, her Kifas. Point
of equity." There was long silence.
The Llun senior's ears lowered and lifted. Her nose wrinkled and
smoothed again. "Point of equity," she declared. "The
composition of the han is in fact in question. Family right takes
precedence. The hearing is postponed until Chanur rights and Mahn
have been settled." "No," said a
familiar, kifish voice. Among the tall, black-robed figures there was
a stirring, and Pyanfar moved her hands to her hips and close to her
pockets. More of the kif moved -- to the outrage of the hall, the
whole kifish contingent left the rim of the meeting hall and came out
to the center of it. The stsho moved with them, gangling pale
figures, sorrowfully gaunt, their pastel patterns asymmetric and
erratic on their white skins, their persons in disarray and their
heads drooping. And one kif stood taller than the rest, his stance
that of authority among them. Pyanfar pursed her lips and slowly drew
them back, eyes broadfocused on all the kif, well toward a dozen of
them and, gods knew, armed beneath those robes. "Akukkakk," she
said. "We protest this
decision," the kif said to the Llun. Not whining, no: he drew
himself up with borderline arrogance. "We have property in
question. We've suffered damages. This Outsider and these mahe are in
question. I claim this Outsider for kif jurisdiction; and I claim
these mahe as well for crimes committed in our territories. They're
from the ship Mahijiru, which is wanted for crimes contrary to the
Compact." "Tully," Pyanfar
said. "Papers." He moved up beside her and
gave them to her, rigidly quiet. She offered the papers to the page,
who took and read them. "Tully. Listed by
Kirdu Station authority as crew, The Pride of Chanur, with a mahen
registration number." "The connection is
obvious," the kif said. "I charge this Outsider with attack
on a kif ship in our territories; with murder of kif citizens; with
numerous atrocities and crimes against the Compact and against kif
law in our territories." Pyanfar tilted her head
back with a small, unfriendly smile. "Fabrications. Is the Llun
going to tolerate this move?" "In which acts,"
Akukkakk continued, "this Chanur ship and all its crew
intervened at Meetpoint, with the provocation of a shooting incident
on the docks, the killing of one of my crew; with the provocation of
a hani attack in the vicinity of the station, in which we defended
ourselves. In which attack this mahe intervened and took damage, a
reckless act of piracy -- " "Lie," Gold
tooth said. "Got here papers my government charge this kif." "A wide-reaching
conspiracy," Akukkakk said, "in which Chanur has involved
itself. Ambition, wise hani. Don't you know the Chanur ... for
ambition? I am kif. / have heard . . . the Chanur have maintained a
tight hold over the farther territories where your ships go, private
for themselves and their partisans. Now they deal with the mahe, on
their own; now they make separate treaties with Outsider forces,
contrary to the Compact, for their own profit. Kif relations with the
mahe are not friendly; we know this particular captain and his
companion who hovers armed and waiting just off the station
perimeter, threatening our ships and yours. This is your law? This is
respect for the Compact?" "Llun," said
Pyanfar, "this kif is disregarding the station's decision. I
don't need to specify the game he's engaging in. The law protects the
han from such outside manipulations. These charges are a tactic,
nothing more." "No," said a
voice from the gallery behind. A hani voice. A voice she had heard.
Pyanfar turned, ears flattened, pricked them up again as she saw a
whole array of familiar faces on the other side of the hall. Dur
Tahar and her crew; and the Faha beside her. "This is not,"
the Llun said, "a hearing. The kif delegation has its right to
lodge a protest; but the matter is deferred." Dur Tahar walked forward,
planted herself widelegged. "What I have to say has bearing on
the protest. The kif s right that the Chanur's gone too far, right
that the Chanur's made deals on her own. Ask about a translator tape
the Chanur traded to mahendo'sat and denied to us. Ask about this
Outsider the Chanur claims as crew. Ask about deals worked out in
Kirdu offices which excluded other hani and created incidents from
there to Meetpoint." "By the gods,
ambition!" Pyanfar yelled, and crooked an extended claw at the
Tahar's person. "Ambition's a spacer captain who'd side with a
hani-killing kif to serve her house's grab for power. Gods!" she
shouted, looking about the room at strange faces, at unknowns,
insystem crews and landless on Anuurn for the most part. "Is
there anyone here from Aheruun? Anyone from that side of the world,
someone here to speak for the Handur ship this kif killed at
Meetpoint, while they were nose-to-dock and had no idea there was any
trouble in the system? Ambition -- is the Tahar, who left us at Kirdu
crippled and alone and came running home to use the information to
Tahar advantage, who sides with the kif who hit three hani ships and
a fourth ship from outside our space, a kif who's terrorized these
wretched stsho into coming here with gods know what story, a kif
who's created a crisis involving the whole structure of the Compact.
By the gods, I know what blinds the Tahar to the facts -- but you,
you, Faha -- great gods, they killed your kin, and you stand there
taking the part of the hakkikt who had you boarded? What's happened
to your nerve, Hilan Faha?" Hilan opened her mouth to
answer, stepping forward, ears back, eyes wild. The kif howled and
clicked, drowning whatever she tried to say, and howled until
Akukkakk himself lifted a bony gray arm and shouted, turning to the
Llun. "Justice, hani, justice. This lying thief Chanur was
involved from the beginning, private ally of the mahendo'sat, an
agent of theirs from the beginning, involved with them in attacks,
reckless attacks into our territory which we do not forget." "This kif,"
Goldtooth roared, louder still, "hakkikt. Killer. Thirty ships
his. Make all kif together, this hakkikt. Make move new kind trouble
in Compact, got no care Compact, spit at Compact." He strode
forward, pulled a wallet from his belt and slammed it into the hands
of the page. "Papers say from my government truth. Hani and mahe
hunt this one, yes. Got kif run from mahe, move into territory this
new Outsider, this Tully. Big territory. Big trouble. I make truth
for the han; I make liar this Akukkakk Hinukkui. I witness at
Meetpoint; this kif lie." "Danger our station,"
the stsho stammered, thrust forward by the kif. "We protest --
we protest this incident; demand compensation -- " "Enough," the
Llun said over all the uproar, and hani noise died quickly; kif
commotion sank away likewise. - "Llun." Hilan Faha said in
that new quiet. "Enough," the
Llun said, scowling. "The kif has his right to protest and to
advance a claim. But since that claim exists, all sides have a right
to be heard. There's a further statement entered in this cause." She took a card from her
belt, thrust it out for the harried page, who took it in haste and
thrust it into the wall slot which controlled the hall viewing
screen. It flared to life, rapid printout.
stsho kif knnn
(*) hani mahe tc'a
station ship ship
ship ship ship self
trade kill see
here run watch know
fear want see
hani escape help knnn
violation violation
violation violation violation violation self
CompactCompactCompactCompactCompactCompactCompact
help help help
help help help help
Tc'a communication, matrix
communication of a multipartite brain, simultaneous thought-chains.
Pyanfar studied it, took a deeper breath, and Goldtooth looked, and
the kif, and all the hani. "It's our shadow,"
Haral murmured. "It's the tc'a with that rotted knnn." "It got itself an
interpreter, by the gods," Pyanfar muttered, and a vast grin
spread across her face. "Got itself that tc'a off Kirdu and it's
talking to us, gods prosper it -- See that, kif? Your neighbors don't
like your company, and someone else saw what happened, someone you
can't corrupt." "We've got a major
crisis thanks to you," Dur Tahar cried, thrusting herself
between her and the Llun. "Gods blast you, Chanur, that you can
find anything encouraging in knowing the tc'a are involved in this
mess. Knnn mobbed my ship outbound from Kirdu, knnn, like in the old
days of dead crews and stripped freighters. Are you proud of that,
that you've gotten them involved? I call for the detention of this
Outsider pending judicial action; suspension of this mahe's permit
and papers; for the censure of the captain of The Pride of Chanur
along with all her crew and the house that sponsors her meddling." "But nothing for the
kif?" Pyanfar returned. "Nothing for a kif adventurer who
murdered hani and mahe and provokes a powerful Outsider species, with
all that might mean? Ambition, Tahar. And greed. And cowardice. What
have you got from the kif? A promise Tahar ships will be safe if this
dies down? I turned down a kif bribe. What did you do when they made
you the offer?" It was a chance shot, a
wild shot; and the Tahar's ears went back and her eyes went wide as
if she had been hit hard and unexpectedly. Everyone saw it. There was
a sudden hush in the room, the Tahar visibly at a loss, the kif
drawing ever so slightly together, the stsho holding onto each other.
It was bitter satisfaction, the sight of that retreat. "Bastard,"
Pyanfar said, with a sudden rush of sorrow for the Tahar, and for the
Faha who stood there in that company, ears fallen. Akukkakk stood
with his arms folded, kifish amusement drawing down the corners of
his mouth and lengthening his gray, wrinkled face. "He's laughing,"
Pyanfar said. "At hani weaknesses. At ambition that makes us
forget we don't trade in all markets, in all commodities. And at his
reckoning we'll trade again to get our ships moving again outside our
own home system -- because there are more kif out there than you see,
and hani won't all fight. Hani never do. Hani never have. And I've
been stalled long enough. I was promised transport downworld and I'm
taking it. I'm going home and I'm coming back, master thief, master
killer -- and I'll see you in that full hearing." Akukkakk no longer
laughed. His arms were still folded. The kif were all very quiet. The
whole room was. Pyanfar made a stiff bow to the Llun, turned and
walked for the door, but Goldtooth and his crowd lingered, facing the
kif. Tully slowed and looked back, and Pyanfar did, scowling. "Goldtooth. You come.
I'm responsible for you, hear? As the Tahar's made herself
responsible for this kif onstation. Come on." The Tahar said nothing to
the gibe. That was the measure of their disarray. "Got friend,"
Goldtooth said to Akukkakk. "This time, got friend, and not at
dock. You docked good, kif, got you nose to station. Maybe you ask
hani give you safe escort, a?" Akukkakk scowled.
"Perhaps. And perhaps Chanur will be so kind as to do that
herself. When she comes back from Anuurn." A chill wind went
wandering across Pyanfar's back. She stared a moment at the kif,
thinking over the odds. The Llun and the insystem merchanters were
thinking likewise, surely, what they might logically do with seven
kif ships and two mahe hunters. "Give me,"
Akukkakk said, "the Outsider. Or the translation tape. It's not
so much. I can get it from the mahe, sooner or later." "Ha, like you get
from hani?" Goldtooth muttered. "What hani give,"
Pyanfar said darkly and with distaste, "is a matter for the han.
Consensus. Maybe, hakkikt. Maybe we'll talk this thing out, with
assurances on all sides. Before it damages the Compact more than it
has already." The quiet persisted, on
all sides. The stsho stared back at her from haunted pale eyes, the
kif from red-rimmed dark ones, hani from amber-ringed black. Kif
faith. She turned her back, retreated as far as the door of the
chamber, and this time Goldtooth and his crew were with her -- and
Tully, whose face was pale and beaded with sweat. The door opened and sealed
again at their backs. They passed Llun guards. The corridor stretched
ahead, empty. "Going to my ship,"
Goldtooth said. "Going to back off and keep watch these kif
bastard." "Going to the shuttle
launch," Pyanfar said. "Got business won't wait. Got stupid
son and trouble in Chanur holding. Life and death, mahe." "Kif find you go,
make one shot you shuttle. Jik make you escort, a? Run close you
side, make orbit, get you back safe." She stared up at the
mahe's very sober face, reached and clasped his dark-furred and
muscular arm. "You want help after this, mahe, you got it.
Number one help. This kif lies. You know it." "Know this,"
Goldtooth said. "Know this all time." Their ways parted at the
intersecting corridor. Pyanfar pointed the way back to the dock, a
straight walk onward, and Goldtooth took it, his crew with him, a
dark-furred, tall body moving off down the hall. Pyanfar motioned her
own group the other way, which curved toward the shuttle launch. Steps hurried after them,
clawed hani feet in undignified haste. Pyanfar looked about as the
rest of her party did, saw a young and black-trousered stationer come
panting toward her. The youngster made a hasty bow, looked up again,
ears down in diffidence. "Captain. Ana Khai. The station begs
you come. All of you. Quickly and quietly." "Station gave me
leave for my own pressing business, young Khai. I'm due a shuttle
downworld. I'm not stopping for conferences." "I was only given
that word," the Khai breathed, her eyes shifting nervously over
them. "I have to bring you. The Llun is there. Quick. Please." Pyanfar glared at the
young woman, nodded curtly and motioned the others about to follow
the messenger. "Quick about it," Pyanfar snapped, and the
youngster hurried along at the limit of her strides, hardly keeping
ahead of them. It was, as the Khai had
said, not far, one of the secondary meeting rooms at which door a
whole host of stationers and no few insystem spacers hovered, a crowd
which parted at their approach and swarmed in after them. The Llun indeed. The old
man of the station, sitting in a substantial cushioned chair and
surrounded by mates/daughters/nieces and a few underage sons, without
mentioning the client familiars, the black-trousered officials, the
scattering of spacer captains. Kifas Llun was there, first wife,
standing near him, and there were others of other houses. A Protected
house; the Llun could not be challenged, holding too sensitive a
post, like other holders of ports and waterways and things all hani
used in common, and he had slid past his prime, but he was impressive
when he got to his feet, and Pyanfar exchanged her scowl for a
respectful nod to him and to Kifas. "This trouble,"
he said, and his voice shook the air, a bass rumbling. "This
Outsider. Let me see him." Pyanfar turned and
gathered Tully by the arm. There was a panicked expression in Tully's
eyes, a reluctance to go closer to the Llun. "Friend," she
said. "He." Tully went, then, and
Pyanfar kept her claws clenched into his arm to remind him of
manners. Tully bowed. He had that much sense left. "Male, na
Llun," Pyanfar said quietly, and the Llun nodded slowly, his
heavy mane swinging as he did so and his mouth pursed with interest. "Aggressive?"
the Llun asked. "Civilized,"
Pyanfar said. "But mahe-like. Armed, na Llun. The kif had him
awhile. Killed his shipmates. He got away from them. That's where
this started. We have a translator tape on him. We'll provide it with
no quibbles. I want it on record he gave it freely, for his own
reasons. In the Tahar matter -- that's a han question. I didn't trust
the Tahar as a courier. Gods witness -- I'll be sorry to be right.
And by your leave, na Llun, I'll be back to answer your questions.
There's a matter of time involved. I was given leave to go." "Challenge has been
given," Kifas Llun said, and Pyanfar darted her a hard look.
"Only now the word came up." Pyanfar thrust Tully back
to Hilfy's keeping and started away without a word. 'Ker Chanur," Kifas
said, and she cast a burning look back. "A quicker way: listen
to me." "I'll want a com
link," Pyanfar said. "Now." "Listen, ker Chanur.
Listen." Kifas crossed the room to her and took her arm to stop
her. "Our neutrality -- " "Gods rot your
neutrality. Keep the kif off my back. I've got business downworld." "Got a ship,"
one of the insystem captains said unbidden, a hani of Haral's build.
"She's old, ker Chanur, but she can set down direct on Chanur
land, that no shuttle can do. Tyo freight lander: Rau's Luck. I'm
willing to set her in the way of trouble if Chanur's minded." Pyanfar drew in a breath
and looked at the aging captain. Rau was no downworld house. Insystem
hani, landless and unpropertied except for a ship or two, unless they
were Tyo-based, colonials. "Your word is worth
something," Kifas said, "Pyanfar Chanur. We're bound by the
Compact. We can't do more than pin these kif at the station. You've
got the mahe for help. You can do more than we can. Chanur has two
more ships in that might be of use. Tahar -- " Kifas did not finish the
statement; her ears flicked in discomfort. "Yes," Pyanfar
said. "Tahar. I'm not so sure I'd rely on their ships either at
the moment." "We can't muster a
defense," Kifas said. "Your captains are downworld with
most of the crews. So are others. We've got kif at dock for as long
as we can keep them, but you said yourself -- there may be others." "You've got the
insystem captains." "Against jumpship
velocity -- " Pyanfar looked about her,
at the spacers present. "Go to the jumpships you can reach; you
can fill out crews. Take orders. No matter what house. Get those
ships able and ready. I'll get the Chanur captains back here; and any
others I can find. In the meantime, keeping those ships ready to go
will be the best action with the kif." She looked at Kifas Llun,
grim sobriety. "Your neutrality is in rags. Give me one of your
people. To bring witness down there to what's going on. I have to get
moving. Now. Mahijiru and Aja Jin will keep the kif pinned and the
way open. -- If I don't move, ker Llun . . . the upheaval in the han
is going to make differences, differences to more than Chanur.
Tahar's down there, I don't doubt they are. Standing in line to get a
share of the spoils. You're already in it. I'm not going to let
Chanur go under." "Rau," Kifas
Llun said. "You're ready to go?" "On the instant,"
the Rau captain said. "Ginas," Kifas
said, with a gestured signal to one of her people. "Go with the
Chanur. Talk to them. Answer what you're asked. You're at her
orders." The one singled out bowed.
Kifas offered the door, a sweep of her hand. "Llun,"
Pyanfar murmured in a quick bow of courtesy toward Kifas and toward
na Llun, who had seated himself again. Then she turned and swept her
own company, the Llun messenger included, toward the door, following
the Rau captain. "This way," the Rau said, indicating a
turn which would take them toward the small-craft docks. Kohan, Pyanfar persuaded
herself, would not have taken challenge immediately as it was
offered, not knowing that she had reached the system; and surely he
knew by now: it was routine that a house was notified when a ship
belonging to it made port. The timing of it argued that his enemies
knew; and surely Kohan did. He was too wise to be catapulted into any
such thing without some preliminaries: she relied on that, with all
her hopes. Two hours by plane from
the shuttleport to the airport that served Chanur and Faha and the
lesser holdings of the valley: with the Rau's proposal they saved
that much time: and on that too she relied. And on a pair of mahe. And gods grant Akukkakk
saw some hope for himself. If one of those kif ships got a strike
signal off, if the kif was bent on suicide -- he might accomplish it,
if there were more kif ships lying off out of scan range. Maybe five,
six hours lag time for message and strike. With luck, the kif did not
know that the hani ships gathered in system were on skeleton crew;
with luck the kif would regard them as a threat ... if no one had
talked. "That ship of yours,"
Pyanfar said to the Rau. "Armed?" "Got a few rifles
aboard," the Rau said.
XII There was no access ramp
for an insystem workhorse, only a dark tube into a chill and dimly
lit interior directly off the dock. The Rau dived in first and
shouted to her crew, a thundering and booming of feet on the
uncushioned plates. The air was foul, stinging to the nose. Pyanfar
came aboard seconds after the captain of the Luck, put a hand on the
hatchway as she stooped to enter and drew the hand back damp with
condensation -- seals leaked somewhere in the recycling systems. Gods
knew what the margin was on lifesupport. She worked her way past
lockers to the control pit of the probe, trusting Haral and Chur to
get everyone else aboard and settled. "Name," she
asked of the Rau captain, dropping down into the three-cushion pit,
waist-high, and ducking under the overhead screens. "Nerafy,"
the captain said, nodded back toward her presumed co-pilot and
navigator who were dropping into the pit on the other aide. "Tamy;
Kihany." "Got us an escort,"
Pyanfar said. "Mahe's going to see we get there and back; move
it. No groundlings in this lot. Will you give me com?" "We're going,"
Nerafy said, sinking into her cushion. The hatch boomed shut,
deafening. "Kihany: it's Anuurn we're headed for; get the
captain that link." Repulse cut in. Pyanfar
hand-over-handed her way around the back of the cushions to the
com/navigation board and braced herself with feet and a hand on the
rim to lean over the board. "I want," she said, ignoring
the contrary slams of g against which she shifted without thinking,
"relay to Aja Jin. Mahe. Get that ship first." It took a moment. A mahe
voice came crackling through. They lost g as Rau's Luck executed a
wallowing maneuver, acquired it again. "Aja Jin. Have you got us
in watch? Track this signal." "Got," the
comforting answer returned. "Got. We watch." "Out," Pyanfar
said. She broke it off, not anxious to have long conversations with
kif to pick them up. The mike in hand, she tapped the harried
navigator on the shoulder. "Next call: satellite to ground
station Enafy region, area 34, local number 2-576-98; speak to anyone
who answers." The navigator threw her a
desperate glance, shunted her functions to the copilot and started
working, no questions, no objections: "What landing?" the
copilot was asking; "First we get there," Narafy said. "Got
ourselves a rescue run. Speed counts." "Map Coordinates
54.32/23.12," Pyanfar said, listening to the one-sided com. They
were in contact with Enafy. In a moment more the navigator held up a
finger and she tucked the plug into her ear and applied herself to
the mike. "Chanur," she said, shaking; but that was from
the cold. "Is Chanur answering?" "Here," said a
voice from the world, distant and obscure by a bad pickup. "This
is Chanur Holding."
"This is Pyanfar.
We're on our way in. Who's speaking?" There was a moment's
silence in which she thought the contact was lost. "It's aunt
Pyanfar," that voice on the other end hissed within the mike's
pickup. "For the gods' sake, tell Jofan and hurry!" "Never mind Jofan,
whelp! Get Kohan on and hurry up, you hear me?" "Aunt Pyanfar, it's
Nifas. I think ker Jofan's coming . . . The Tahar are here; the Mahn
have challenged; Kara Mahn has; and Faha's gone neutral except
Huran's still here; and Araun and Pyruun have called that they're
coming. Everyone's gathered here. They knew -- Aunt Jofan, it's -- " "Pyanfar."
Another voice assumed the mike. "Thank the gods. Get here." "Get Kohan on. Get
him. I want to talk to him." "He's -- "
Jofan's voice trailed off or static obscured it. "I'll try. Hold
on." "Holding."
Pyanfar rested the back of the hand which held the mike against her
mouth, shifted her body in pain: they were under acceleration now.
The rim of the pit was cutting into her back. She achieved a little
relief, found all her limbs shaking against the strain, the physical
effort of the position she maintained. She watched the screens,
seeing something else moving on scan. Aja Jin, she hoped. It had
better be. "Pyanfar." The
deep voice, static-ridden, exploded in her ear. Kohan, beyond
mistake. "Pyanfar." "Kohan. I'm in
transit. I'm coming. How much time, Kohan?" A long silence. "Kohan." "I'll wait till you
get here. I think I can stall it that long?" "I'm coming in on a
direct landing. I want you to stay inside and hear nothing and see
nothing. I have something with me. Something you'll find of
interest." . "This Outsider." "News has got there." "Tahar -- make
charges against you." "Already settled.
Settled. You understand?" There was another
prolonged silence. "I have my wits about me. I knew you were on
your way. Had to be here if this crowd showed up in such graceless
haste." She let go a long breath.
"Good. Good for you. You keep at it." "Where's Hilfy?" "Fine. Fine and safe.
I'm on my way. Now. No more talking. We've got business. Hear?" A breath crackled through
the static. "I'll work that Mahn whelp into a fit of his own."
It began to sound like a reassuring chuckle. "I'll sit inside
sipping gfi and enjoying the shade. -- Move, Pyanfar. I want you
here." "Out," she said.
She handed the mike back, a strain of her arm against acceleration,
let the arm fall back and shivered as it sank in how long that
conversation had been, how clear it was who was speaking from this
shell of a ship. They were on directional to the satellite: perhaps
no one had picked it up. "Got it set up,"
Narafy said. "I'm going back to my
crew," Pyanfar said. She edged her way out of the pit, one foot
against the bulkhead. "Safety line," the captain advised
her; she saw it, and tucked down, gained the braking clip on the line
and wrapped her hand into it. Launched herself down the long pit of
the central corridor, past moisture-dewed metal and aged plastic
lighting panels, her own weight and a half on her arm. She reached
the barriered recess of cushions where the others had snugged in and
Haral snagged her, hauled her with difficulty over the padded safety
arm which closed off the compartment, and in several hands, one pair
alien, she let herself collapse into the cushions with the rest of
them. "Got contact with Kohan," she breathed, sorting her
limbs out from among the rest of them. "He's going to stall." Hilfy's face. She saw that
tight-lipped relief and felt a little dismay for the girl who had
come onto The Pride a voyage ago j and the woman who stared back at
her, self-controlled and reckoning the odds. "Got contact with the
mahe too," Pyanfar said. "They're with us." She cast a
look past Chur and Haral to the Llun, Ginas, who nodded, a flat-eared
and anxious stare in return "You don't," Pyanfar said,
"have to make the return trip There's no reason for you to, ker
Llun. We just get you down safe the one time, that's all." "Appreciated,"
the Llun said tautly. "Captain." Haral
thrust a package of chips into her hands, and a bottle of drink.
Pyanfar braced the bottle in her lap and hooked a claw into the
package, hands trembling with the prolonged strain, used the claw to
punch double holes on the.,; plastic bottlecap and spout. The food
helped, however difficult to swallow in the acceleration stress. She
offered to the others. 1 "We've had ours,"
Chur said. Bodies squirmed down the I line, everyone settling. Tully
tried to talk, hand signs and mangled words, and Hilfy and Chur
communicated with him as best they could, speaking slowly, something
to do with the ship and atmosphere. He was cold; they held onto him
and settled finally. Pyanfar rolled a strained glance at Haral and
then closed her eyes, numbed by misery. There was no more that she
could do for either situation, the one on the ground or the one on
station. Kohan's nerves would be on the ragged edge by now. This
go-and-stop-again psyching for challenge would wear at him by the
hour. Like nerving oneself for a jump and walking back from it. The
second effort was a harder one. A from-the-heart effort. Gods knew
how long the situation had been sawing at Kohan's nerves. Months.
Since the night Hilfy left. Since before that -- when he saw Khym
Mahn likely to fall to challenge. There was a point past which he
would heave up any food he tried to eat, awake all night, wearing his
strength down with pacing, with the constant adrenalin high which
would wear him to skin and bone within days. Huran and some of the
other mates had stayed. There were his youngest couple of sons, who
had run for the borders if they had any sense, not to linger within
his reach. There were a score of daughters, who might muster worth
enough to see he ate and slept as much as possible approaching this
time. Daughters, mates, and with the captains % in, several more
half-sisters, who were most reliable of the lot. But there were grown
Chanur males who might come straying back from exile to key up the
situation further -- returned from Hermitage, from wandering, from
gods knew what occupations which filled the lives of males in the
sanctuaries. Always, at challenge, there were those, hopeless, keyed
up, and dangerous, hanging about the fringes. As for young Kara Mahn, he
was probably good. He had taken Khym, who had survived thus far more
by wit than by strength. Kara had promised both size and
intelligence, the last time she had seen him. Chanur blood, after
all, Chanur temperament. She cursed her own stupidity, in seeking
after a mate like Khym, a quiet and peaceful domicile, a mountain
hideaway and Khym, a resting place, a garden like a dream. Khym had
listened to her stories, soothed her nerves, made her laugh with his
wit; an ideal mate, without threat to Chanur's interests. But gods,
she had never thought what she left behind in that place, her own
Chanur-blooded offspring, larger than Khym's daughters and sons of
local wives; larger; and stronger; and -- if such things could be
inherited -- quarrelsome and demanding. Nothing like family
loyalty. Her son yearned after his Chanur heritage so much he wanted
to take it for his own. Betterment of the species,
hani philosophers had called it. Churrau hanim. The death of males
was nothing, nothing but change happening: the han adjusted, and the
young got sired by the survivors. One man was as good as another; and
served his purpose well enough. But by the gods it was not
true; there were the young and the reckless who might, on a better
opponent's off day, win; there were challenges like the one shaping
up against Chanur, which involved more than one against one. And sometimes -- gods --
one loved them.
She slept somewhat, in the
steady acceleration, in sensations so uncomfortable numbness was the
best refuge; and in the confusion of jump and time, her body was
persuaded it was offshift or perhaps the shift past that. A new sensation brought
her out of it, weightlessness and someone hauling her out of a drift
as a light flashed. "About to make descent," Haral said,
and Pyanfar reached for a secure hold in preparation. It was a rough descent:
she expected nothing else. She had no idea of the shape of the
lander, but it was not one of the winged, gliding shuttles. The
lander hammered its way down after the manner of its kind, vibrating
stress into the marrow of living bones and vibrating skin and tissues
and eyes in their sockets, so that there was nothing to do but ride
it down and wish desperately that there was a sight of something,
something to do with the hands, some sequence which wanted thinking
about and managing. There was a time she
simply shut her eyes and tried to calculate their probable position;
she had, she decided, no love of riding as a passenger. Then the
sound increased and the stresses changed -- gods, the noise. She
heard what she fervently hoped was the landing pods extending. They were in straight
descent now, a vibration of a rhythmic sort. Touch, one pod and then
the others, a jolt and a series of smaller jolts, and silence. Pyanfar flicked her ears
with the sudden feeling that she was deaf, looked about her at her
shaken comrades. Down was different than before: the gimbaled
passenger section had reoriented itself and the central corridor was
flat and walkable. "Out," Pyanfar said. "Let's see
where they set us down." Hilfy unlocked the padded
safety barrier, and they went. Hydraulics operated noisily and when
they had come as far as the control pit, daylight was flooding in
onto the metal decking from the open lock. The others descended.
Pyanfar delayed for an instant's courtesy, a thanks for the Rau crew
who were climbing out of their pit, their ship secured. "If you
come," Pyanfar said, "well; you're welcome in Chanur land.
Or if you stay here -- we'll be bringing more passengers as quickly
as we can." "We'll wait,"
Nerafy Rau said. "We put you close, Chanur. We'll have the ship
ready for lift; we'll be waiting." "Good," she
said. That was her preference. She ducked under the conduits and
swung down onto the extended ladder, scrambled down to the rocky flat
where they had landed, in the generally wedge-shaped shadow of the
lander. The air smelled of scorch and hot metal; the ship pinged and
snapped and smoke curled up from the brush nearby. Midday, groundtime. The
shadows showed it. Pyanfar joined the others and looked where Chur
pointed, to the buildings which showed on a grassy horizon: Chanur
Holding; and Faha was farther still. And the mountains which hove up
blue distances on their right -- there lay Mahn Holding. Close
indeed. "Come on,"
Pyanfar said. She had made herself dizzy with that outward gaze, and
shortened her focus to the rocky stretch before her. Horizons went
the wrong .way; and the colors, gods, the colors. . . . The world had
a garish brightness, a plenitude of textures; and the scents of grass
and dust; and the feel of the warm wind. One could get drunk on it;
one had enough of it in a hurry, and the sight filled her with a
moment's irrational panic, a slipping from one reality to the other. "Not so far,"
Hilfy panted, latest from the world. "They'll have heard that
landing. He'll know." "He's got to,"
Haral agreed. So will others, Pyanfar
thought, deliberately slowing her pace. Rushing up exhausted -- no;
that was not the wise thing to do. Tully checked his long strides as
they did; the Llun who had trailed behind them caught up. Manes were
windblown, Tully's most of all. The sun beat down with a gentle heat:
autumn, Pyanfar realized, looking about her at the heavy-headed
grasses, the colors of the land. Insects started up in panic, settled
again. "They'll surely send
a car," Chur said. "If they've spotted us." "Huh," Pyanfar
said; it was her own hope. But none had showed thus far, no plume of
dust, nothing of the sort. "They may," she said, "have
their hands full. No good any of them leaving, not if things are
heating up." No one answered that. It
called for nothing. She kept walking, out to
the fore of the others. Familiar ground, this. She had known it as a
child. They reached a brook and waded it ankle deep, came up the
other side, and by now Tully was limping -- "He's cut his foot,"
Chur said, supporting him while he lifted it to examine it. "You
come," Pyanfar said
unforgivingly, and he nodded, caught his breath and kept going. Not so far now. They
joined the road that led to the gates, easier going for Tully, for
all of them. Pyanfar wiped her mane from her eyes and surveyed the
way ahead, where the gold stone outer walls of Chanur Holding
stretched across the horizon, no defense, but a barrier to garden
pests and the like -- the open plains lapped up against it in grassy
waves. Beyond it -- more buildings of the same gold stone. There
would be cars . . . the airport was behind them, down the road; they
would have come in from there, all the interested parties and the
hangers-on, save only the adventurers from the hills, from Hermitage
and sanctuaries, who would come overland and skulk about the fringes;
vehicles would have driven in along this road, gone through the
gates, parked on the field behind the house . . . that was where they
always put visitors. When their uncle had
fallen to Kohan --
The years rolled back and
forward again, a pulse like jump, leaving her as unsettled. Homeward
. . . with all the mindset which took things so easily, so
gods-rotted eagerly. Nature. Nature that made
males useless, too high-strung to go offworld, to hold any position
of responsibility beyond the estates. Nature that robbed them of
sense and stability. Or an upbringing that did. The grillwork gates were
posted wide, flung open on a hedge of russet-leaved ernafya,
musky-fragrant even in autumn, that stretched toward the inner gates
and the house, an unbroken and head-high corridor. She passed the
gate, looked back as the others overtook her, and in turning --
"Pyanfar."
Someone came from among the hedge, a rustling of the leaves; a male
voice, deep, and she spun about, hand to her pocket, thinking of
someone out of sanctuary. She stopped in mid-reach, frozen by
recognition a heartbeat late -- a voice she knew, a bent figure which
had risen, bedraggled and disfigured. "Khym," she
murmured. The others had stopped, a haze beyond her focus. The sight
hurt: impeccable and gracious, that had been Khym; but his right ear
was ripped to ribbons and his mane and beard were matted with a wound
which ran from his brow to chin; his arms were laced with older
wounds, his whole body a map of injuries and hurts, old and new. He
sank down, squatting on the dust half within the hedge, his knees
thrusting out through the rags of his breeches. He bowed his filthy
head and looked up again, squinting with the swelling of his right
eye. "Tahy," he said
faintly. "She's inside. They've burnt the doors down ... I
waited -- waited for you." She stared down at him,
dismayed, her ears hot with the witness of her crew and of the Llun
-- on this wreckage which had been her mate. Who had lost that name
too, when he lost Mahn to their son. "They've set fires in
the hall," Khym stammered, even* his voice a shadow of itself.
"Chanur's backed inside. They're calling on na Kohan -- but he
won't come out. Faha's left him, all but -- all but ker Huran;
Araun's there, still. They've used guns, Pyanfar, to burn the door." "Kohan will come,"
Pyanfar said, "now. And I'll settle Tahy." She shifted her
weight to move, hesitated. "How did you get to Chanur? Kohan
knows?" The whole eye looked up at
her; the other ran water, squinted almost shut. "Walked. Long
time ago. Forget how long. Na Kohan let me ... stay. Knew I was here,
but let me stay. Go on, Pyanfar. Go on. There's no time." She started away, down
that road which led to the house, not without looking back; and Hilfy
walked beside her, and Chur and the Llun, but Tully -- Tully had
lingered, stared down at Khym, and Khym reached out a hand to stay
him, only looking. . . . Khym, who had delighted in
the tales she brought him, of strange ports and Outsiders, and he had
never seen a ship, never seen an Outsider, until now-^- "Tully!" she
called, and Haral caught him by the arm and brought him quickly. And
then: "Khym -- " she called. For no reason. For shame.
Kohan had been as soft . . . when Khym had strayed here in his exile,
hunting some better death than strangers. He looked up at her, a
slow gathering of hope. She nodded toward the house, and he picked
himself up and came after them: that much she waited to know. She
turned on the instant and set a good pace down the dusty road, eyeing
the hedges which followed its bending. Ambush, she thought; but that
was an Outsider way, something for kif and mahe, not hani on
Gathering. Still. ... "Scatter," she
said, with a wave of her arm to her crew. "The garden wall: get
there and we'll settle this daughter of mine. Hilfy: with Haral;
Tully -- Chur, you take him. Ker Llun, you and I are going through
the gate." Ginas Llun nodded, her
ears flat with distress, and while the others scattered in opposite
directions through the hedge, Pyanfar thrust her hands into her belt
and strode along at a good pace around the bending of the road and
toward the inner gates. A step scuffed behind her, and that was Khym:
she turned to look, to encourage him with a nod of her head, herself
in gaudy red silk; her companion in official black; and Khym -- grimy
rags that might once have been blue. He came near her, beside her,
limping somewhat; and gods, the waft of infection in his wounds --
but he kept their pace. They could hear it now,
the murmur of voices, the occasional shout of a voice louder than the
others. Pyanfar's ears flattened and pricked up again; a surge of
adrenalin hit fatigued muscles and threatened them with shivers.
"It's not challenge," she muttered, "it's riot." "Tahar's here,"
Khym said between breaths. ''Na Kahi and his sisters. That's second
trouble. It's set up, Pyanfar." "I can bet it is.
Where's our son's brains?" "Below his belt,"
Khym said. And a few steps later, with the sounds of disorder clearer
in the air: "Pyanfar. Get me past Tahy and her crowd and I can
make a difference in this . . . take the edge off him. That much,
maybe." She wrinkled her nose,
gave him a sidelong glance. It was not strict honor, what he
proposed. Neither was what Tahar intended. Their son -- to end him by
such a maneuver --
"If I can't stop it,"
she said, " -- take him." Khym chuckled, a throaty
rattle. "You always were an optimist." They rounded the last
curve, the gate ahead, wide open toward the gardens, the aged trees,
the vine-covered goldstone of the Holding itself. A crowd surged
about the front of the house, trampling the plantings and the vines.
They shouted, taunts and derision toward Chanur; they rattled the
bars of the windows. "Rot them,"
Pyanfar breathed, and headed for the gate. A handful of Mahn spotted
her and set up an outcry, and that was all she wanted: she yelled and
bowled into them with/ Khym at her side, and the Mahn retreated for
reinforcements in the garden. "Hai!" she yelled, and of a
sudden there were Hilfy and Haral atop the wall, and a peppering of
shots into the dirt in front of the Mahn, who scrambled for cover. "Get the door,"
Pyanfar yelled, waving at them, and they jumped and started running:
more of the Mahn and some of their hangers-on were on the colonnaded
porch, and of a sudden Chur and Tully were on the low garden wall
which flanked that, Chur yelling as if encouraging a whole band of
supporters. The Mahn darted this way and that, herdwise, and
scattered from the door in the face of the three-way charge. Pyanfar
raced up the steps and converged with Haral and Chur, gun in hand,
burst through the doorway half a step ahead of them, into dimmer
light and a chaos of bodies and the reek of smoke. It was a huge
room, lit from barred windows, the wreckage of double doors at the
end: hani there turned and faced their rush in a sudden paralysis, a
hundred intruders who stared at leveled Chanur guns. Some moved; young women
put themselves into the fore of things. Others shifted about the
fringes, carefully. Voices echoed deep within the halls. Pyanfar kept
the pistol braced in her two hands, her eyes wide-focused, taking in
all the movements. That young woman -- her
own image, red-gold mane and stature more than her Mahn sisters:
Tahy. Her focus narrowed. The young man -- gods, tall and straight
and broad-shouldered . . . years since she had seen them. Longer
years for her planetbound daughter and son, growing-up years; and
they had allies ... a score of Mahn youths, male and female; and
about the walls of the room -- Kahi Tahar, na Kahi, the old man,
Chanur's southern rival; and others -- senior women of holds she
suspected as Enaury and others of Tahar's hangers-on, here for the
scavenging. "Out of here,"
Pyanfar said. "Out of here, all of you." "Guns," Tahy
spat. "Is that the way of if? We have our own. Is that what you
choose, while na Kohan hides from us?" "Put them away,"
Pyanfar said. She pushed the safety back on, pocketed hers. In the
tail of her eye Haral did the same, and the others followed suit.
"Now," Pyanfar said. "You're somewhat strayed from the
field, son of mine. Let's walk this back out where it belongs." "Here," Kara
said. A movement in the corridor
behind the Mahn: Pyanfar noted it and drew in her breath. Chanur. A
good score of the house. And Kohan, a head taller than the others. "Hold it,"
Pyanfar shouted, moved suddenly to the side, distraction: the
invaders shifted in confusion and hands reached for weapons, a
moment's frozen confusion and suddenly Chanur at the Mahn's backs.
The Mahn retreated in haste, backing toward the wall that had been at
their left, but Tahy and her companions who thrust themselves between
Kara and Kohan quick as instinct; Pyanfar dived for the other side,
Haral and Chur and Hilfy moving on the same impulse, interposed
themselves. She touched Kohan's overheated arm. He was trembling.
"Back," she said. "Back off, Kohan." And to Tahy:
"Out. No one wins here. If Kohan delayed -- it was my doing; and
I'm here. With Ginas Llun, who'll back up what I say. With an
Outsider, who's proof enough we've got trouble. We've got kif at the
station: they've called the captains in ... to defend Gaohn. It's
like that up there. We can't afford a split in the han." Tahy gave a negative toss
of her head. "We hear a different story -- all the way. No. You
want to settle something on our own -- we'll oblige you. Kohan need
help, that you had to drag him up out of the brush? We'll settle
that." "Station's fallen,"
a voice said out of Chanur ranks, and one of the captains thrust
herself forward, Rhean, with crew in her wake. "Word's on the
com: they've called for help -- it's no lie, ker Mahn." Noise broke out in the
room, a ripple of dismay through all those present. The Llun strode
into it, neutrality abandoned. "How long ago? Chanur . . . how
long?" "Message is still
going." Kohan answered, self-controlled, though his breath was
coming hard. "Kara Mahn. I forget all this. It's over. Leave
now. We'll not talk about it." Kara said nothing. There
was a glassy look in his eyes. His ears were back. But Tahy looked
less sure of herself, motioned the others back. "You've got your
chance," Pyanfar said quietly, evenly. "Listen to me:
you've got Mahn. Tahar's not your ally. You go on with this
challenge, and Tahar's here to take on the winner: worn down, you
understand me. To take two Holdings. Their ambition's more than
yours. The Llun can tell you that -- a Tahar captain, dealing with
the kif -- " "Rot your
impertinence," Kahi Tahar shouted, and one of his sisters
interposed an arm. "A lie," that one said. "Perhaps,"
Pyanfar said levelly, "a misunderstanding. An . . . excess of
zeal; a careless tongue. Back out of here. We may not pursue it. --
Tahy . . . out of here. The Compact's close to fracturing. It's not
the moment. Get out of here." ''Na Mahn," Kohan
said. "It's not to your advantage." "You'll lose Mahn,"
Khym said suddenly, thrusting past Hilfy. "Hear me, whelp --
you'll lose it ... to Kohan or to Kahi. Use your sense." Kara was past it. The eyes
were wide and dark, the ears flat, nostrils wide. Of a sudden he
screamed and launched himself. And Khym did. Pyanfar
flung herself about, bodily hurled herself at Kohan as her crew did,
as Hilfy and Huran Faha and Rhean and her crew. He backed up, shook
himself, in possession of his faculties: Pyanfar saw his eyes which
were fixed on the screaming tangle behind her -- herself spun about,
saw Khym losing the grip that would keep Kara's claws from his
throat. "Stop it," she
yelled at Tahy, and herself waded into it, trying to get a purchase
on either struggling body, to push them apart. An elbow slammed into
her head and She stumbled, hurled herself back into it, and now
others were trying to part the two. "Tully!" Hilfy shouted;
and suddenly a fluid spattered them, straight into Kara's face, and
over her, stinging the eyes and choking with its fumes. Kara fell
back with a roar of outrage; and she did, wiping her eyes, coughing
and supported by friendly hands. Chanur had hold of Tully, she saw
that through streaming eyes -- his arms pinned behind him, and Khym
was down; and Kara was rubbing his eyes and struggling to breathe,
She caught her breath, still coughing, shook off the hands which
helped her, She knew the aroma; saw the small vial lying empty on the
floor -- the smell of flowers got past her stinging nasal membranes.
"Tully," she said, still choking, reached out a hand and
pulled him to her by the back of the neck, shook him free of the
Chanur who had seized him -- patted his shoulder roughly and looked
across at her son, whose eyes were still running water. "Break
it off, na Kara. You have Mahn. Call it enough." "Off my land,"
Kohan said. "Tahar. Be glad / don't challenge. Get clear of
Chanur Holding. Na Kara: a politer leave. Please. Priorities. I'll
not come at you now. I could. Think of that." Kara spat, turned, stalked
out, wiping his eyes and flinging off offered help, dispossessed of
his impetus, his dignity, and his advantage. Tahy remained, looked
down at Khym, who had levered himself up on his elbows, head hanging.
She might have flung some final insult. She bowed instead, to
Pyanfar, to Kohan, last of all to Khym, who never saw it. Then she
walked out, the other Mahn before her. Tahar lingered last, na
Kahi and his sisters. "Out," Kohan
said, and the Tahar's ears flattened. But he turned and walked out of
the hall, out the door, and took his sisters and his partisans with
him. Kohan's breath sighed out,
a gusty rumble. He reached for Hilfy, laid his arm about her
shoulders and ruffled her mane, touched the ring which hung on her
left ear -- looked at Pyanfar, and at Khym, who had struggled to his
knees. Khym flinched from his stare and gathered himself up,
retreated head down and slouching, without looking at him. "Got no time,"
Pyanfar said. "Well done. It was well done." Kohan blew a sigh, nodded,
made a gesture with his free hand toward the rest. Nodded toward the
door. "Ker Llun." "Na Chanur," the
Llun murmured. "Please. The station -- " "Going to be fighting
up there?" "No small bit,"
Pyanfar said. "You handle it?" "Might use some of
the house." "I'll go," Kohan
said. "/'// go up there." "And leave Tahar to
move in on the boys? You can't. Give me Rhean and Anfy and their
crews; whoever else can shoot. We've got to move." Kohan made a sound deep in
his throat, nodded. "Rhean; Anfy; Jofan -- choose from the house
and hurry it." He patted Hilfy on the shoulder, went and touched
Haral and Chur in the same way -- lingered staring at Tully, reached
and almost touched . . . but not quite. He turned then and walked
back. "Hilfy," he said. "My ship," Hilfy
said. "My ship, father." It cost him, as much as
the other yielding. He nodded. Hilfy took his massive hand, turned
and took the hands of Huran Faha, who nodded likewise. "Come on,"
Pyanfar said. "Come on, all of you. Move. -- I'll get her back,
Kohan." "All of you," he
said. The others gathered themselves and headed for the door in
haste, some delaying to go back after weapons. Pyanfar stayed an
instant, looked at Kohan, his :eyes, his golden, shadowed eyes; his
ears were pricked up, he managed that. "That matter," she
said, "this Outsider of mine -- I'll be back down to explain it.
Don't worry. Get Chanur back in order. We've got an edge we haven't
had before, hear me?" "Go," he said
softly. "I'll get it settled here. Get to it, Pyanfar." She came back and touched
his hand, turned for the door, crossing the room in a dozen wide
strides and headed off the porch, where no sign remained of the
attack but the trampled garden and a passing of vehicles headed down
the road beyond the wall, clearing out in haste. And Khym. Khym was there,
by the gate, crouched there with his head on his folded arms. Fresh
wounds glistened on his red-brown shoulders. He survived. He went on
surviving, out of his time and his reason for living. "Khym," she
said. He looked up. She motioned toward the side of the house, that
pathway which the others had taken to the back, where they could find
transport. He stood up and came, limping in the first steps and then
not limping at all. "I'm filthy," he said. "No polite
company." She wiped her beard and
smelled her hand, sneezed. "Gods, I reek for both of us." "What is he?" "Our Outsider? Human.
Something like." "Huh," Khym
said. He was panting, out of breath, and the limp was back. They came
along the side of the house, down the path by the trees at the back,
and latecomers from the house reached them and fell in at their pace,
carrying rifles. Khym looked back nervously. "It's all right,"
Pyanfar said. "You want to go, Khym? Want to have a look at
station?" "Yes," he said. They reached the bottom of
the hill, where Haral and Chur had started up two of the trucks,
where a great number from Chanur were boarding, a good thirty, forty
of them, besides those ten or so behind. Tully was by the side of
one, with Hilfy. Pyanfar reached and cuffed Tully's arm. "Good,"
she said. "Up, Tully." He scrambled up into the
bed, surprisingly agile for clawless fingers. Hilfy came up after
him, and Khym vaulted up with a weight that made the truck rock.
Others followed. Pyanfar went around to the
cab, climbed in. "Go," she said to Haral, and the truck
lurched into motion, around the curve and onto the road, toward the
outer gates, flinging up a cloud of dust as they careened between the
hedges, jolting into near-collision with the far post of the outer
gate before they headed off across the field on the direct course
toward the waiting ship. Gods help us, Pyanfar
thought, looking back at the assortment which filled the bed of the
truck, young and old Chanur, armed with rifles; and a one-time lord;
and Tully; and the Llun, who had decided to come back with them after
all. The ships had gotten off
station to keep the kif there, and the kif were still there, indeed
they were; were running the halls of station -- kif loose with
revenge in mind, a hakkikt who might see his own survival doubtful
and revenge very much worth having. She faced about again,
feet braced against the jolts as the truck lurched over uneven
ground. Haral fought the wheel with desperate turns and reverses,
following the track they had walked now, the beaten line of their own
prints in the tall grass, where there would be fewer hidden pits and
hummocks. "Hope Aja Jin's still
in place," Haral muttered. "Hope Hinukku and the
rest are," Pyanfar said, bracing her hand against the dash. "If
we've got more kif than we had -- if they've gotten a call out for
reinforcements. ..." "Lagtime's on our
side." "Something had better
be," Pyanfar said. "Gods, for a com." Haral shook her head and
gave all her strength to the wheel, slowed as they jolted toward the
slope of the stream. The truck lumbered its way over the grassy bank,
clawed its way over muddy bottom and rocks, slewed about and found
purchase on the other bank, headed up again, with the ungainly wedge
that was Rau's Luck growing closer and closer. A light was flashing,
sun-bright against the ship. Pyanfar pointed to it, and Haral nodded.
The Rau saw them coming. Running lights began to flash, red and
white, blink code. It was the message they
already had. Haral flashed the headlights, a desperate snatch back at
the wheel. Planetary speeds. In the
time it had taken them to get this far from the house, a jumpship
could cross an interworld distance. And perhaps some were doing that.
The han was intact, the structure of Holdings which could decide
policies; but the loss of Gaohn Station --
She cursed herself, to
have assumed any revenge would be too great for Akukkakk's pride; to
strike at stations -- he had done that; no one struck at worlds, not
in the whole history of the civilized powers. Except the kif... it was
rumored that they had done so, in their own rise off their native
world, in the contests for power. They had once struck at their own.
XIII The engines put on thrust,
a hollow roar of the downworld jets, and the Luck lifted. Pyanfar
dropped into the rear of the dark control pit as the deck came up,
hit heavily and crouching and tucked down, straightening the blanket
and pillow she had gotten to pad her back in that nook, on the pit
floor behind the Rau's three cushions. The captain lifted her hand,
signal that her presence was noted, and reached at once back to the
board in front of her. The Luck went on rising; the gear thumped up
into the housings and the pressure mounted. Pyanfar discovered a pain
in her shoulder and struggled a little against the blanket to relieve
it. Not so steep a lift
compared to the angle at which they had landed: the lander flew, of
sorts, vertical lift at first, and then an angled flight which still
had aft for downside, g-wise. The primaries cut in with a thrust
which settled all her gut differentially toward her spine. Some of their company were
well off, aft, in the padded passenger shell: Tully and Khym and
Ginas Llun were settled there, in thick cushions; and Haral, to keep
them company and settle problems. The unlucky rest rode the boards,
tilting cushioned partitions expanded from the next bulkhead --
blind, dark misery, packed in like fish, four across, the back of the
next cushion tilting back and forth almost in one's face . . . gods,
gods, to ride like that with the ship going into trouble aloft -- she
felt guilt for being where she was, in what relative comfort she had. The copilot let an object
fall to her. She reached with difficulty and gathered the
plastic-wrapped article from the angle of the pit where it stayed
fast, unwrapped the earplug and thrust it in. No information was
coming in during their ascent, only static, but having the contact
helped. Station had gotten that
one message off, had still been sending it out when ascent began,
which meant that the station central command had been in hani control
and that stationers had their hands full, sparing no one to answer
questions. It kept going, meaning that the kif had not gotten to it
to silence it -- or that they had had no critical interest in doing
so. But the docks -- She
pictured the workers fled in panic, disorganized, having no
preparation against such an action as the kif had taken. Attacking
stations was not a thing hani would do; therefore it was not
reasonable; therefore there was no contingency. Gods blast such thinking,
and the complacency which fed it. Gods blast her own; and hani
nature, that they ran each for their own fragmented concerns, because
all the world was set up that way. She had had no choice in going
home to Chanur, because a hani would go on with challenge while the
house caught fire, until the fire singed his own hide. Hani always
went their own way, disdaining Outside concerns, pricklish about
admitting they would not be in space at all but for the mahendo'sat
explorers who had found them -- but that was so. And hani went on
doing things the old way, the way that had worked when there were no
colonies and no outside trade; when hani were the unchallenged owners
of the world and hani instincts were suited to the world they owned. But, gods, there were
other ecosystems. They had another one going, in the Compact itself;
and they dealt with distances wider than the grassy expanses of
Anuurn's plains; and with creatures of instincts which had proven
equally capable of being right in other ways. In one unimagined hell,
the kif way had worked best; and gods, even the chi way had worked
somewhere, lunatic as they seemed, incomprehensible to Outsiders. And
Tully -- who sometimes made half sense, and at other times made none
at all. Had Goldtooth despised her
for her desertion, because being hani she had had no choice but to
go, in the face of every reason to the contrary? Shame pricked at
her, the suspicion that all hani-kind had failed a mahen hope, that
hope which had lent those two ships; and that somewhere up above
might be the wreckage of her mahen allies and The Pride itself, with
a kif waiting to blow this shell of a lander to vapor and junk, along
with the hani brain who had just figured out something critical to
the species, far too late. Madness. The angle had her
brain short of oxygen. There was a grayness about her vision. She
felt nothing any longer in her backside and her arms and her legs,
and the pressure kept j on building. Engine sound changed. They
were leaving the-envelope of I air, still accelerating. She blinked
and struggled to move her neck, saw through a blur telltales winking
in the darkness, saw j a flare of light as the scan screen cleared.
She blinked again, trying to see past the silhouetted arm of the
copilot, making out something large and close to their position. "... Luck," a
voice snapped through the plug into her ear, I "this is The
Pride of Chanur. We'll match with you and lock on." Tirun. If she could have leaped
up and shouted for joy she would I have done so. Pinned by the g
force, it was all she could do to smile, a strained and difficult
smile, with her heart hammering against her ribs and the blood
bringing pain to her extremities. Then the Luck's engines
stopped, and she gasped a reflexive breath in the sudden relief. The
invisible hand which had pressed her to the deck was gone, and she
reached in a practiced hand-over-hand to the com board, drifting feet
toward the overhead and tucking down again to reach the mike. "Hurry
it, Tirun, for the gods' sake. And to the Rau: "Where are the
kif? Can you pick them up?" "Station's scan's
off," the Rau navigator said. "Not just Gaohn's: Harn and
Tyo too, completely down. We've got our own, that's all." "Put on the rescue
beeper," Pyanfar said, thrusting that dire news to a far recess
of her mind. "The Pride can home on it. Let her automatics take
you." "Advice," the
captain said. "Your job now, her Chanur. Gods help us, we're
stone blind to any jumpships moving out there." "Keep her trimmed and
constant and watch out for the shock." Pyanfar aimed herself
back to the shelter of her padded nest in haste. "Those grapples
will do the fine matching, don't try the jets. She's moving under
comp." "Gods, it's on us,"
the copilot said. "Closing,"
Geran's voice sounded through the com plug. "Stand by, Luck." A proximity alarm started,
quickly silenced from the board. Scan broke up. "O gods," said
the navigator. Pyanfar tucked, clenching
the cushion support with all her strength. Impact. The Luck rang and
leapt and her body left the deck, grip scarcely holding; hit it
again, shoved back as the grapples grated, shifted. Held. There was a
comforting silence. Weightlessness. "Got trouble,"
Tirun's voice said. "Blow that lock out; we've got a tube the
other side. For the gods' sake board, abandon ship. We can't defend
you." "Haral!" Pyanfar
yelled down the core corridor. "Everyone! get forward!" "Captain,"
Nerafy Rau said. "Come on,"
Pyanfar said, hauled herself to the captain's cushion and hung there
one-handed, staring down at her. "All of you . . . gods, come
with us. We'll get you back to your ship if there's a chance of it.
If not that, there's kif to settle with, and those people on the
stations -- will you die here with no shot fired?" "No," the Rau
captain said, and started unbuckling. The others did. Pyanfar
completed the somersault and looked aft down the corridor, at a
white-shirted human sailing up it narrowly in advance of a flood of
armed hani. The Rau captain handed her way up from the pit and headed
for the nearby lock and Pyanfar grabbed for the board and the mike as
the crew left it. "Tirun! Where are the kif?" "Gods know.
Mahijiru's running far-guard; tell you the rest when you get here." The bodies of her
companions tumbled about her. The lock powered inward and airshock
rammed through in a cold gust. "Coming," Pyanfar said, and
let the mike go, kicked at the nearest conduit and flung herself into
the stream of bodies, into the dark and numbing cold of The Pride's
ship-to-ship grapple-tube. Extremities went numb. Breath stung in the
lungs and moisture threatened to freeze her eyeballs. It hurt, gods,
it hurt. A light glowed green as she arrived in The Pride's null-g
outer frame, a safety beacon, a guidance star far across the dark,
marking the location of the personnel lift. A blue chain of
glowlights dotted across the blackness toward it, the safety line.
"Khym!" Pyanfar shouted, thinking of his inexperience,
"blue's the guideline, Khym . . . Tully! go to the blue lights!" "Got him,"
Hilfy's young voice shouted up ahead. "Got them both." A door opened onto the
lift. Someone had gotten to it. A distant rectangle opened, blinding
white, with a score of dark bodies hurtling and struggling along the
blue dotted course toward it, large and small with distance, some
like swimmers in the air, some using the rope and propelling the
swimmers along. Bodies collided and caught each other and kept going,
one after the other, into that lift chamber, where they took on color
and identity. Pyanfar found herself slung along the final distance,
hauled into the lift; and among the last came the Rau, into that
blinding glare. "We're in," Chur
was shouting into com. Haral shouted a warning and closed the lift
door, and suddenly all the floating bodies tended floorward as the
car moved. "Brace!" Pyanfar snapped at the novices, but
experienced spacers grabbed them, and of a sudden the car thundered
and slammed into synch with the rotating inner cylinder. There was
full g, and the lift slammed upward again, with a queasy
rear-of-the-car acceleration stress as The Pride put on a gingerly
movement. Something banged in the distance. -- "Grapple's
clear," Haral said. The lift went on rising, past lowerdeck, to
main. Feet found the floor; bedraggled groundlings hugged those who
had a hold on them, ears flat and eyes wild. The car stopped and opened
on main. Pyanfar thrust herself through and out, raced down the main
corridor for the archway of the bridge, claws scrabbling on the
decking against the gentle thrust. Haral was hard on her heels.
"Lowerdeck," Chur shouted behind them. "Ride it back
down where there's secure space." The door closed; the lift
hummed into function again. Pyanfar did not look back. She hurled
herself the last difficult distance, past Geran and Tirun at the
number three and two posts as Haral found her place and slid into it.
Pyanfar reached her own vacant cushion and flung herself into it
without a word. Scan images were coming up on her screens, their
position relative to the world and the station -- a dot that was
knnn-symboled, hovering off apart from the chaos of other dots, two
marked mahe, and the horrid hazard near the station, a horde of
unidentifieds, debris sweeps that marked the death of ships and the
course of their remains. "Aja Jin took
damage," Tirun said steadily. "Kif invaded traffic control
on the station and knocked the scan out. Llun had their hands full;
everyone was boarding any ship at all. We broke out of dock and ran
with the rest . . . figured they were screening incoming ships.
Strike came in three quarters of an hour ago. Outbound now. We're
headed back in to station, present course: Fortune got a landing
party in. Several others got in after them. Proceed?" "Keep talking. Go as
we bear." She reached and hit the motion warning. "We're
moving," she said over allship. "Brace; I'm going to keep
the com open from our end. We've got troubles and I don't want any
stirring about down there. -- Tirun, what's the comp on that kif
movement? Got a course plotting?" The data flashed to the
screen. "All stations have killed scan output. Some of the kif
are out of dock but we don't know which. Only good thing in it, with
station's scan stopped a good bit before the strike, they had only
our last-known position to go on and the attack missed most of us.
Aja Jin got it, being posted stationary; at least one freighter was
hit and we think some of the kif, but we don't know who got hit,
because no one's outputting much chatter and a lot of the freighters
are scan-blanked and hiding. I figure they'll go for the fixed
targets on the next pass -- the station, Aja Jin's last position ..." "Anuurn, maybe." Tirun threw her an
ears-flat look. "You've got it
going," Pyanfar said. "I'll go with it. Give me the rest of
your reckoning. Where do you reckon Akukkakk is?" "I think he was one
that got off station; and he can't have boosted fast enough to have
run with the strikers. I figure he's one of those ships out there,
quiet like all the rest of them. And we find out just which one he is
when that strike force comes sweeping back in." Pyanfar nodded. To take
the maneuver they had handed him -- the undocking of the freighters
-- and to turn it to his own advantage . . . that was very probable.
That was Akukkakk's style, for which she had begun to acquire a
sense: a pattern of movements, a tendency to up the stakes when
challenged. "He's going to go on
sending them in against the station," she judged, "hammer
it into junk. That, for a lesson for us. But he knows rotted well
which one we are, cousins: we're all too conspicuous, and I've a
notion which way he'll go when he can -- even odds between us and
Mahijiru. And since Mahijiru's got Jik by him ..." She cast a
glance at scan, where the mahe rode as a double blip hard by the kif
position at station. "They'll be overriding their own scan, that
strike force, but Akukkakk's going to have a good identified image
for them. Gods rot him." "We drop our people
at station," Haral said from the fourth cushion, "and pull
a tight turn, maybe; go sort that crowd out." "Got to do something,
that's sure. -- Tirun: to you." She shunted back what activity
her board had received. "Take us in. I'm going to talk to the
others. -- Going to need all the rest of you up here. Stay put,
Haral." "Right," Haral
muttered. Pyanfar turned the
cushion, slid out of it, headed out of the bridge at a dead run into
the direction of thrust, digging in for traction. She skidded to a
collision with the wall at the lift, hit the call button and caught
her breath while it came. It arrived; she stepped in
and waited while it sped her to the lowerdeck, tremors in her
muscles, a tendency to shiver in what ought not to be a chill. Lowerdeck main corridor.
She found the Chanur gathered there, braced sitting in the passage,
rifles in laps, the best security they could find near their exit.
They scrambled up as she came . . . and there was Chur among them,
and Khym; and Tully, with Hilfy; and the Llun and the Chanur captains
and their crews. She went among them, caught Chur's arm and looked at
the others. "You've understood?" "Understood,"
Rhean Chanur said. "We try to get the stationers rounded up and
if we have to ride through another strike -- we get to core and try
to wait your pickup after it's past. Gods help us." "The Pride will be
back, Rhean; that's your ship that forced the breach: your crew, gods
look on them. I don't know what damage she may have taken: you'd
better plan for any pickup that comes for you. -- Anfy: same goes;
any ship. Got in-systemers filling jumpship posts, anything we can
get. Gods know who's where. -- The rest of you: if you use those
guns, you pair up with the crews and give backup fire. Hit the wrong
target and you'll kill your own allies, hear? Or blow a seal; keep
your wits straight and know what's behind what you're shooting at.
You go shooting on a station, hear me, you put your shots on the
decking and work up their legs." Young ears lowered in
distress; eyes stared, black-centered. Hilfy's look was something
else again, ears pricked, sober. Pyanfar stared at her, at once
pleased and heartsick. No way to pull her out of it. No need. Those
who went onto station and those who stayed with The Pride were in
equal danger. Maybe more, for them on the ship. Akukkakk would see to
it, given the chance. "Approaching dock."
com said. "Stand by for braking." "We'll not waste
time," Pyanfar said quietly, to those about her. "Chur;
Hilfy; you're all The Pride can send: do it right and get back; all
of you -- Khym ... go with my crew, hear?" He nodded. There was a
pricklishness in the air. No one else would have been glad to take
him. In Chur's and Hilfy's eyes there was no flinching. He glanced
toward them and the remnant of his ears lifted in the look they gave
him. For her sake, she thought.
Gods help them -- if he got one of them killed, rushing into
something blind-crazy. Braking started. They
braced against the corridor wall -- hard thrust, and miserable for
the approach. Pyanfar shut her eyes a moment, slid down to a crouch
with the rest of them, content for the moment to be where she was and
wishing to all the gods she could go with them. Tully -- squatted down
close to Hilfy; Pyanfar turned her head, tightened her mouth in
consideration. That was the one who might bolt. That was the one,
deaf to instructions, crazy with anger. Khym crouched farther down,
shamed, she knew, by his condition; by the distrust about him, the
expectation that he would be more danger than help to his own side,
prone to take his own way, prone to male temper and instability --
Khym, who had saved all their necks and given them the chance to get
aloft in time. Like Kohan, fretting in agony downworld, because he
was trapped in Chanur Holding; and gods, he had won. They lost g, made the
shifts, such that bodies leaned against one another in the nudgings
of the docking jets, and those who had a hold braced those who did
not. Contact. The last
direction of g confirmed itself and the grapples clanged home, the
access thumped into position. "Got contact with a hani force out
there," Geran said. "You've got a clear exit. -- Luck to
you." "Have some yourself,"
Chur called up at the com. "Hai, up there," Hilfy shouted,
and the lot of them scrambled up in readiness to rush to the lock. Pyanfar rose with the rest
of them. '"Tully," she said, and beckoned him. His face
which had been eager took on an apprehension of what she wanted; she
beckoned a second time, with the Chanur forces beginning to head down
the corridor toward the lock, and when he did not come she went after
him and took him by the arm, while Chur and Hilfy delayed. "Go," Pyanfar
said to the two. "Take care." They went, in orderly
haste, with the others, down the corridor toward the lock. Pyanfar
laid her ears back, felt Tully pull at her hand. "Ask," he said.
"Fight them, Pyanfar." "No," she said.
"You can't hear orders out there, understand? Come with me. Come
up to the bridge." If his pathetic small ears
could have moved they would have lain down, she thought; it was that
kind of look. "Yes," he said in a small voice.
"Understand." The lock opened and shut
again shortly after. "Coming up," she called to the open
com. "Easy on the undocking." Tully came with her,
running beside her. She got him into the lift and he leaned against
the wall with his eyes on hers, with pain in those eyes, like Kohan's
pain -- shadowed eyes, his bright mane tangled, his whole body
shrunken with exhaustion and unhappiness. "We go," she
said as the lift opened onto the bridgeward corridor. "We get
the kif, friend, find Akukkakk and settle a score, ship and ship." "There?" He made
a wide gesture, infinity. "This system. All too
close." She strode through the archway onto the bridge, grabbed
Tully's arm and thrust him for the auxiliary seat next Haral's post,
none so safe there, but nothing was. She slid into her own well-worn
cushion and fastened the restraints while Tirun ungrappled; took the
controls as The Pride acquired her own g, sent them out narrower than
she would have cut it with station authorities in a position to
protest. "Situation as-was?"
she asked Tirun. "Figure we've got a
little under a half hour on that strike," Tirun said. "Haral: to all ships;
got kif among us; broadcast ID's, now -- house and origin -- and get
our own signal going." "Right." She put
them over station. Vid showed the two mahe ships clear enough, a
scattering of ships which had never made it away from dock, some
wrecked, some trailing debris that streamed in the station's
rotation. Kif ships, three of them,
still at dock, with their tails singed: Mahijiru had done that much. From the mahe . . .
nothing, neither signal nor output. But they started to move, one
after the other. "We've stirred
something," she said. "Our friends have some notion they're
not talking about." "Getting ID input,"
Geran said. " Scan started acquiring
data, positive ID's on hani ships. The knnn zigged and darted at some
velocity, throwing off small ghosts that indicated boosts. Pyanfar
ran her tongue over her teeth, refusing that distraction, watching
the pattern of those ships as yet unidentified, as more and more
identifications came in and The Pride increased her own speed.
Another ship was moving in on dock, and another one behind, insystem
haulers, at a standstill compared to their own building velocity.
Ships were moving in random directions, not to be caught when the
strike came in -- at least that was their hope. "Rot them!"
Haral exclaimed. "Crippled even -- look at that speed." Jik, Haral meant. Aja Jin
trailed debris; but the two mahe kept accelerating with no apparent
impairment . . . straight into the thickest concentration of ships. She eased up, shut down
altogether. The mahe had given up flexibility, launched themselves
into the heart of things, deliberate and less and less able to veer
off and handle a turn. "Maintain our options," she said
quietly. Suddenly a freighter
designated hani blossomed into chaff. "Captain," Tirun
said. Three unidentifieds in the vicinity acquired the enemy
designation. Mahijiru and Aja Jin swept toward the group. "Keep out of our way,
rot you," Pyanfar muttered. Haral was on com, advising all ships
in the area to head off the kif movement. "Going to have the
mahe in line of fire if they do a straight turnover," Geran
said. "Fire headon -- " "Going to let the kif
pass our zenith," Pyanfar said grimly. "That's our best
side anyway." "I've got it,"
Tirun advised her, throwing the safety off the armaments of the upper
frame. "Knnn's coming up,"
Geran said sharply, and the proximity alarm beeped as the
high-velocity ship ripped from tail to bow, nadir, gone into the
developing mahe/kif confrontation so fast scan developed them a line
of likely course. "Mahijiru's
compliments." Haral relayed. Scan showed debris, hani,
mahe, or kif was uncertain: positions were too close. Dots coincided
and split as the kif moved toward them. Someone was hit; and suddenly
the fight was headed The Pride's way. "Akukkakk's there,"
Pyanfar said, beyond doubt what kif would rate The Pride his prime
target, disregarding the mahe who had just attacked. "Two ship now,"
Tully exclaimed. Scan showed the mahe still paired, no longer
accelerating and probably braking for their return; showed hani
moving on the kif from points of the sphere; and two active kif
ships. The third was involved with a debris-track, near the knnn's
erratic blip. "That kif they get." "This pair we got,"
Tirun muttered. The double image was closing with them, less and less
interval, with their own impetus added to the kif s oncoming
velocity. The knnn was on the return now, streaking out of the
vicinity of the debris-track. Mahijiru and Aja Jin were farther and
farther away, obliged to lose velocity before they could make way on
the kif s heading, too close to traffic for jump pulses to assist. "Which one?"
Tirun asked. "Take the best
target," Pyanfar said. "I can't tell." Hani jumpships
were on the near-scan now, several of them, hammering toward
intercept with the kif, but not in time for The Pride, No place for a
freighter, a race with the swift hunter-ships, even cargo-dumped. No
way to win. "Now!" The kif ripped past them,
zenith, and they fired. Screens broke up. Explosion slammed The Pride
askew and red-lighted the boards. Pyanfar reached in an adrenalin
timestretch, fought the pitch and wobble. In the screen's clearing a
new rapid image bore down on them, a high knnn wail in com. It went past them, zenith.
Pyanfar spun The Pride one hundred eighty degrees in a tail roll,
anticipating a kif turnover and return pass, hoping to get a shot
off. Mahijiru and Aja Jin would come; were coming; might get back in
time. The Pride fired back as the guns came in line: the kif had
proceeded into turnover as their respective momentum separated them,
and fire came back, broke up screens, red-lighted remaining clear
boards. "Got one," Geran
yelled. "Look at that bastard wobble. By the gods we got him!" Fire from the other kept
up. The interval was still increasing between them, but at a slower
rate. It would be coming back . . . soon. "Goldtooth,"
Pyanfar said, punching in the com, "rot you, hurry it a bit,
someone out there hurry it." The knnn was pulling about
in a tight turn, one of those maneuvers a knnn could survive and hani
could not. It zigged into the interval, into the line of fire. "Good job,"
Goldtooth's voice reached The Pride. "Got -- " Com broke up. Scan
suddenly went berserk, all the sensors blind . . . . . . jump field. Gods, a
jump field -- in crowded space. "Captain!" Tirun
yelled, far away and suddenly close as the field let them go. Tully
cried out, a miserable wail. Something was there --
where nothing had been; a massive presence, a vast blip on scan as it
cleared, a monster located to starboard zenith. They were off their
heading, displaced. Everyone was. Comp was flickering wildly trying
to compensate. Pyanfar keyed into the system, trying to get sense out
of it. Gods, the newcomer was huge. Scan had the other blips, that
were the kif and the mahe and the hani and the solitary knnn --
"Captain."
Haral's voice. Corn went on broadcast again, a wailing chorus which
overburdened the audio, noise vibrating above and below hearing,
wounding the ears. The huge blip broke apart,
fragmented, not debris, but discrete parts of which one stayed
central and the rest sped outward. "Knnn," Pyanfar
breathed. "Traveling in synch. Gods help us all." "Hani -- " Com
crackled through the static, a familiar, kifish voice. "Pyanfar
Chanur -- " The knnn ships moved
together, a cloud of them, headed for the kif; and all at once the
kif s outgoing velocity began to show increase -- Akukkakk had way
and he was throwing everything he had into it. Retreating. Unable to
boost up: the knnn were too close, and closer yet. The solitary knnn ship
zigged and darted and joined the chase. "Chanur!"
Goldtooth said. Pyanfar watched the
screens, frozen in place. Hani voices came over com, panicked,
questioning. The chase on scan gathered more and more velocity. Of a sudden came another
output, a signal which made no sense to comp: scan started blinking
on the ship-sized object the knnn had left behind, asking operator
intervention. An alien voice came over
com, Tully-like and frightened. Pyanfar cast a glance at
Tully, who clung sweating and jump-shocked to the edge of the com
counter, whose eyes stared wildly as the voice kept going. "## ship,"
translator rendered the transmission from the newcomer. "## ship
## you." "Com!" Pyanfar
yelled at Haral and got it. Her heart pounded against her ribs. "This
is the hani ship The Pride of Chanur. You're in hani space. Friend,
hear?" "Captain," Tirun
cried, "Captain, the knnn -- " The translator response
droned in her ears. Pyanfar stared at the screen, at a narrower and
narrower gap between the knnn and the fleeing kif. "Tully,"
she said without looking around. "Haral -- give him com. Give it
to him." The translator voice went
out, cut. She flung an instant's look back, at Tully, who had gotten
himself together, who had the mike in hand and talked a wild-eyed
rapid patter at these creatures who had arrived in knnn synch, in a
ship which had come in hauled like so much freight, unable to
communicate with the knnn --
"Captain -- " She looked about again.
Knnn closed with Hinukku, surrounded the kif, became one mass about
it, as they had been massed about the Outsider ship at its arrival. "Gods," Tirun
muttered. "They're trading,"
Pyanfar said incredulously. "Like at Kirdu -- gods, they're
making a trade. An Outsider ship -- for Hinukku. For Akukkakk." "Pyanfar!"
Goldtooth's voice came over com. "You got sense these bastard?" "Human ship,"
Pyanfar said, punching in her still-active link. "The knnn just
dropped a live cargo on us. Tully's kind. -- They're still going, by
the gods, the knnn are still going, outbound." "Kif ship leave
station," Jik cut in. "He go." A solitary kif, of the
crippled three at station ... it was so: a lame kif without a tail,
headed out on the course of the other lame kif, inching his way into
retreat. "Right down the incoming strike track, that's their
course," Pyanfar said, fairly shaking with excitement. "By
the great and lesser gods, they're pulling out, they're going to
run." There was a sudden and
major vacancy on scan, the characteristic scatter-ghost of a ship
departed into jump -- where the mass of knnn had been, enveloping
Hinukku. A vast ghost, a ripple in space-time; and hard after it -- a
smaller ghost, their own knnn. Vanished. The two remaining kif kept
going, realspace and realtime, headed for the far dark and sending
out a steady signal, telling of disaster. Running for their lives. "We got,"
Goldtooth said. "Got, Pyanfar." "Got. -- Gods know
what we've got." She heard Tully still chattering back and forth
with the newcomer, heard lilts and tones in his speech she had never
heard. She looked back at him, who had all but usurped Haral's com
board. He saw her. His face was wet. "Friend," he said to
her in her own language. "All friend." Gods knew what there was
to say to the newcomers that the translator could convey without
foulup. Gods knew how to cope with a dozen other Tullys equally
confused and upset as he had been in his arrival. "They come," she
said slowly, distinctly. "Tell them they come to station." "Come, yes." She spun about again,
toward the screens, started putting on thrust for a stationward
course. Other ships were proceeding on that heading, the hani
jumpships who had never slackened speed; hani who had kin on station;
hani who had crew from station or who had dropped landing parties on
the docks to try to assist the Llun. Anything might be
happening there, even now, with kif elsewhere in rout. A hundred Outsiders plated
in gold could not have interested her at the moment. "Captain -- "
Geran said; and of a sudden new data came up on the screens, and a
familiar steady signal came over audio. "Station's broadcasting
again, captain." She heard the mahe advise
them of the obvious, heard the alien chatter from the Outsider, who
must have picked it up, and the voices of hani sending anxious
queries to station. "Station is entirely
secure," the answer came back. "This is Kifas Llun
speaking; resistance has ended and the station is entirely secure." Pyanfar kept up the
thrust, reckless of the lights which advised of damage. That rotted
number one vane was hit again; gods knew what else was gone, but the
fine control was still there; and likewise their ability to brake: no
limping in; no lanes established yet: they were all see-and-avoid. Other signals came in.
Harn Station was back on output; and then Tyo, reporting minor
damage, minor casualties. Hilfy, Pyanfar kept
thinking; and Chur. And Khym: at the bottom of
her thoughts, Khym, for whom she had no hope. But that was what he had
come looking for, after all. A sweat prickled on her
nose. Breath came hard under the acceleration. The mahe traveled with
them, and for its own reasons and in its own purpose, the Outsider
ship came, outstripping slower insystem haulers for whom that voyage
was the work of hours. By the time they could get
there, Gaohn Station might have some reckoning of the casualties.
XIV The Pride opened accesses
while Mahijiru eased into dock beside her, and Jik's Aja Jin stood
watch toward that quarter of the system out of which some stray kif
might still come . . . not expected, but they took precautions. The Outsider ship came in
more slowly still, permitted docking, but having to accomplish it
without understanding the language, the procedures, and without
compatible equipment: "Beside us," Pyanfar had told them
simply. "You got vid? You see four grapples: airlock placed in
center, understand? You go slow, very careful. You have trouble, you
stop, wait, back off: small ship can come from station, help you
dock. All understood?" "Understand,"
the answer had come back through the translator. And the Outsider
arrived, cautiously . . . wondering, doubtless, at the holed
carcasses of kif ships nearby; at the signs of fire which pitted the
adjacent section of the station torus. Someone on the dock got a
direct line hooked up. "Captain," Geran cried, her eyes
shining amber. "Captain, it's Chur and Hilfy. They're there,
both of them!" "Huh," Pyanfar
said judiciously, because there was a docking Outsider chattering in
her other ear at the moment; but relief jellied her gut, so that she
heard very little of the Outsider's babble at all. She looked at her
crew, and at Tully, whose eyes had lighted at the news. "They're safe,"
he asked, "Chur and Hilfy?" "We're going out
there," Pyanfar said, thrusting back from the controls. "All
of us, by the gods." She stood up, remembered the tape they had
duped on the way in and pocketed it. "Come on." They came, off the bridge
and long-striding down the corridor, Tully too, rode down the lift
and marched out the lock. If there was eve1- a time for running for
joy, it was that last walk down the rampway; but
Pyanfar held herself to a sedate walk down the ramp, into the wide,
fire-scarred dock where ha stood with weapons. Chur and Hilfy and some of
the other Chanur -- o gods, Hilfy, with a bloodstained bandage round
her side and leaning on Chur who had one arm in a sling. They smiled,
in shape to do that, at least. Chur hugged Geran one-armed, and
Pyanfar took Hilfy by both shoulders to look at her. Hilfy was white
about the nose, with pain in the set of her mouth, but her ears were
up and her eyes were bright. "We got them,"
Hilfy said hoarsely. "Got behind them at the dockside while
others came through the core and pushed them out to us. And then I
think they got some kind of order because they went frantic to get to
their ships. That was the big trouble. One got away. The rest -- we
got." "Khym." Hilfy turned with some
evident stiffness, indicated a figure*, crouched against the far side
of the dock, small with distance "Na Khym got the one that got
me, aunt, thank the gods." "Hit them hand to
hand, he did," Chur said. "Said he never* could shoot worth
anything. He came across that dock and hi1 that kif, and gods, five
of them never more than singed his fur I don't think they ever saw a
hani of his size -- gods, it was something. They bailed out of cover
and we got the leftovers." Pyanfar looked, at once
proud and sad, at that quiet, with' drawn figure. Proud of what he
had done -- Khym, who had never been much for fighting -- and sad at
his state and his future. , Gods, if they could only
have killed him -- given him what her son had not had the grace to
give. . . . Or perhaps Kara had sensed
he could not kill him; it* Khym Mahn backed to the wall was a
different Khym indeed. "I'll see him,"
she said. "We're going to get you two to station hospital."
. "Begging pardon,"
Hilfy said, "station hospital's got its hands full. Rhean's got
someone hit bad; and Ginas Llun-she's none too good either; and a lot
of others." • "Hilan Faha,"
Chur said, "and her crew -- they're dead, captain. All of them.
They led the way in for the core break-through. They insisted to. I
think it was shame -- for the company they'd kept." "Gods look on them,
then," Pyanfar said after a moment. "The Tahar -- "
Hilfy said bitterly, "got Moon Rising out and ran for jump. Ran
for it. That's what they're saying on station. But the Faha wouldn't
go with them." "That'll be the end,"
Pyanfar said. "When that tale gets back to Enafy province, Kahi
Tahar and his lot won't show their faces in Chanur land or
elsewhere." "Hani," a mahen
voice bellowed, and here came Goldtooth and crew, a dozen
dark-furred, rifle-carrying mahendo'sat flooding toward them,
towering over them. Goldtooth grabbed Pyanfar's hand and crushed it
till claws reminded him to caution. He grinned and slapped her on the
shoulder. "Got number one help, what I tell you?" Hani were staring at this
mahe-hani familiarity. Her crew was. Pyanfar laid her ears back in
embarrassment, recalled then what they owed Goldtooth and his unruly
lot and pricked the ears up at once. More, she linked arms with the
tall mahe, and gave the hawkers on dockside something proper to stare
at. "Number one help," she said. "Got deal," said
Goldtooth. "Got friend Jik repair, same you get at Kirdu. Chanur
fix, a?" "Rot you -- " "Got deal" "Got," she
admitted, and suffered another slap on the shoulder. She looked at
Tully, thinking of Chanur balance sheets, debits and credits. Looked
at him looking at her with those odd pale eyes full of worship.
Behind him an accessway had opened. His own kind had come, gods, a
bewildering assortment, pale ones and dark ones and some shades in
between. "Tully," she said, signed with her eyes that he
should look, and he did. He froze for the instant,
then ran for them, hani-dressed and hani-looking, ran to his assorted
comrades, who were clipped and shaved and clothed top and bottom in
skintight garments shod besides. Hands reached out to him; arms
opened. He embraced them all and sundry and there was a babble of
alien language which echoed off the overhead. So he goes, Pyanfar
thought with a strange sadness -- and with a certain anxiety about
losing a valuable contact to others -- to Llun, by the gods, who
would be eager to get their own-claws in; and Kananm and Sanuum and
some of the other competitors in port. Pyanfar shed Goldtooth's arm
and crossed the dock toward the knot of humans, her own companions
following her. Tully brought his people at least halfway when he saw
her, came rushing up and grabbed her hand with fevered joy. "Friend," he
said, his best word, and dragged her reluctant hand toward that of a
white-maned human, whose naked face was wrinkled as a kif's and
tawny-colored like a hani's. The captain, she thought;
an old one. She suffered the handclasp with claws retracted, bowed
and got a courteous bow in return. Tully spoke in his own language,
rapidly, carrying some point -- indicated one after another of them
and said" their names his way -- Haral and Tirun, Geran and Chur
and Hilfy; and the mahendo'sat at least by species. "Want talk,"
Tully managed then. "Want understand you." Pyanfar's ears flicked and
lifted, the chance of profit within her reach after all. She puckered
her mouth into its most pleasant expression. Gods, some of them were
odd. They ranged enormously in size and weight and there were two
radically different shapes. Females, she realized curiously; if j
Tully was male, then these odd types were the women. "We talk,"
Goldtooth interposed. "Mahe make deal too." "Friend,"
Pyanfar told the humans in her best attempt at I human language.
Tully still had to translate it, but it had its effect. "I come
to your ship," she said, choosing Tully's small j hani
vocabulary. "Your ship. Talk." "I come too,"
Goldtooth said doggedly, not to be shaken. Tully translated. "Yes," Tully
rendered the answer, grinning. "Friend. All friend." "Deals like a mahe,"
Pyanfar muttered. But that arrangement was well enough with her. She
suddenly conceived plans -- for the further loan of two mahe hunter
ships on a profitable voyage. "Captain," Haral
said, touching her arm and calling her attention to a cluster of
figures coming out of the dockside corridor. Llun were on their way --
Kifas Llun herself in the lead of I that group, come to answer this
uncommon call at Gaohn Station, a score of black-trousered
officialdom trailing after her. They would demand the
translator tape, that was sure. Pyanfar thrust her hands into her
waistband. "Friends," she assured Tully, who gave the
approaching group anxious looks, and he in turn reassured his
comrades. "Hilfy," Pyanfar
said, "Chur, no need for you to stand through this. Go to the
ship. Geran, you go and take care of them, will you?" - "Right,"
Geran agreed. "Come on, you two." No protests from them.
Chur and Hilfy started away in Geran's keeping and Tully delayed them
to take their hands one by one as if he expected something might keep
him from further good-byes. Gods, she had no desire to
deal with the Llun or anyone at the moment. Her knees ached, her
whole body ached, from want of sleep and from strain. She felt a span
shorter than she had come across that blink from Kirdu.' They all
must. Tully too. She wanted --
She wanted to have time
... to talk to her own; to find out who else of Chanur was hurt; to
call Kohan. ... And somehow -- to talk to
Khym. To do something, anything for his misery, in spite of what
others thought and said. "Geran," she
called out at the retreating group. "Khym too. Get him aboard
and tend to him. Tell him I said so." A small flick of the ears.
"Aye," Geran said, and went off in Khym's direction while
Chur and Hilfy made their own way back. Pyanfar turned to the
arriving Llun with a dazzlingly cheerful smile, fished the tape from
her pocket and turned it over to Kifas at once with never a fade of
good humor. "We register these
good Outsiders, our guests, at Gaohn nation," Pyanfar said,
"under Chanur sponsorship." "Allies, her Chanur?"
There was a frown of suspicion on Kifas Llun's face. "Nothing
the Tahar said weighs here now with us ... but did you send for
them?" "Gods no. The knnn
did that. Knnn who got a bellyful of kif intervention in their space,
I'd guess; who found these Outsiders near their space and decided in
their own curious fashion to see to it that they met reputable
Compact citizens of a similar biology -- snatched them ,up in synch,
they did, and they took the hakkikt out the same way, may they have
joy of him. They're traders, you know, ker Llun, after their own
lights. I'll wager our human friends here don't know yet what's
happened to them or how far they are from home or how they got here.
They'll have drugged down and ridden out the jumps it took to get
them here; and gods know how many that was or from where." "Introduce us,"
the Llun said. "I'll remind you,"
Pyanfar said, "that we and they have gone through too many time
changes. We're not up to prolonged formalities. They're Chanur
guests; I'm sponsoring them and I feel it incumbent on myself to see
that they get their rest ... but of course they'll sign the
appropriate papers and register." "Introductions,"
the Llun said dryly, too old and too wise to be put off by that. "Tully," Pyanfar
said, "you got too rotted many friends."
It was what she expected,
grueling, a strain on everyone's good humor, and entirely over-long,
that visit to station offices. There was some restraint exercised, in
respect to family losses, in respect to frayed and lately high
tempers; in respect to the fact that for one time out of a hundred,
hani had worked together without regard to house and province, and
the cooperative spirit had not entirely faded. There was gratitude to
Goldtooth and the mahe ships who got station privileges and repair.
Gaohn Station was all too anxious to share the bill with Chanur,
aching to get Aja Jin into the hands of Harn Shipyards, to be studied
and analyzed during the course of the work. The mahendo'sat were
evidently satisfied with the situation -- smug bastards, Pyanfar
thought, bristling somewhat as all hani did, at the unhappy truth
that the mahendo'sat were always ahead of hani, that mahendo'sat
technology which had gotten them into space in the first place was
responsible for keeping them there. The mahendo'sat were apparently
ready for their allies to see the hunter-ships, at least. Rot the
Personage and his small fluff with him. Station was eager too for
a look at the human ship; and doubtless the humans entertained some
suspicions about that and everything else, but it was a fair question
what they had in their power to do about it. They were, at least for
the moment, effectively lost "We find home,"
Tully said, "not far from Meetpoint. Know this. Your record,
your ship instruments -- help us " "Not difficult at
all," Pyanfar said. "All we have to do is send your records
through the translator and get our charts together, right? We come up
with the answer in no time." "Mahendo'sat,"
Goldtooth said, "got number one good reckoning location human
space. Number one good charts." All too many friends
indeed, Pyanfar reflected.
Tully went to his own, not
without hugging her and Haral and Tirun, and shaking hands
energetically with Goldtooth and with Kifas Llun and others -- an
important fellow among his people now, this Tully, surely; a person
who knew things; a person with valuable and powerful friends. Good
for him, she thought, recalling the wretched, naked creature under
the pile of blankets in the washroom. She made the call to
Kohan, a quick' call -- her voice was getting hoarse and her knees
were shaking; but it was good to hear that things on the world had
settled down, that Kohan had gotten himself a good meal and that the
house was back in some order. While the world had been
under kif guns, they had tidied up the house, cooked dinner, and
started replanting the garden. Pyanfar lowered her ears at the
thought, how little real the larger universe was to downworld hani,
who had never thoroughly imagined what had almost happened to them;
who heard about the terrible damage to the station as they might hear
about some earthquake in a remote area of the globe, shaking their
heads in sympathy and regretting it, but not personally touched --
worried for their own kin, of course worried; and there would be
hugging and sympathy at homecoming. But they set the world in order
by replanting the garden and seeing Kohan fed. Gods look on them all. She went on the last of
her strength to the hospital, to visit the Chanur wounded, because
she was first in Chanur and it meant something to them; because she
owed courtesy to Rhean, who sat with her mending crewwoman; because
the news from home would do them good, these downworld Chanur not of
the ship crews, who understood the necessity of planting gardens. She checked with station
command, that the Rau had found a way back to their ship, which
another mail freighter had managed to secure for them. And then she and Haral and
Tirun walked the long way back to The Pride, all of them hoarse and
exhausted and finding the limit of their energy simply in putting one
foot in front of the other. She limped, realized she had somehow
broken a claw; thought with longing of a bath, and bed, and breakfast
when she should wake.
But on The Pride, one
thing more she did: she stopped by sick bay and looked in on Geran's
charges, found Hilfy and Chur comfortably asleep on cots jammed side
by side into the small compartment, and Geran drowsing in the chair
by the door. Geran woke as her shadow
crossed her face, murmured bleary-eyed apology. Pyanfar made a shrug.
Tirun and Haral looked in at the door, leaned there in the frame, two
worn ghosts. "Khym," Pyanfar
said, missing him. "Cot in the
washroom," Geran said. "By your leave, captain. He wouldn't
accept Hilfy's quarters, but she tried to insist." "Huh." She edged
through to see to Chur and Hilfy, saw their faces relaxed and their
sleep easy, walked out. "Orders?" Haral asked in apparent
dread: "Sleep," she said, and the sisters went their way
gladly enough. For herself, she walked on
down the corridor to the washroom and opened the door. Khym was safely tucked in
bed, nested in blankets on a comfortable cot. One eye was bandaged.
The other opened and looked at her, and he moved to sit up -- clean,
his poor ears plasmed together such as they could be, the terrible
scratches on his arms and shoulders treated. Patches of his coat were
gone where the scabs had been; his beard and mane were haggled up,
doubtless where snarls had had to be snipped out. "Better?" she
asked. "Ker Geran shot
enough antibiotics into me, I should live forever." Rueful humor. She sank
down on the end of the cot, refusing, as Khym refused, to abandon a
cheerful face on things. She patted his knee. "I hear you put a
wind up the kif s backs." He shrugged, flicked his
ears in deprecation. "You got your look at
station," she said. "What do you think of it?" Ears pricked up. "Worth
the seeing." "Show you the ship
when you and I get some sleep." "I can't stay up
here, you know. You're going to have to find me a shuttle down
tomorrow." "Why can't you stay
up here?" He gave a surprised
chuckle. "The Llun and others will say, that's who. Not many
lords as tolerant as na Kohan." "So station's their
territory. So, well. I thought you might consider taking a turn in
mine. On The Pride." "Gods, they'd -- " " -- do what? Talk?
Gods, Khym, if I can carry an Outsider male from one end of the
Compact to the other and come out ahead of it, I can rotted well
survive the gossip. Chanur can do anything it pleases right now. Got
ourselves a prize in this Outsider; got ourselves a contact that's
going to take years to explore. I can deal with Tully; and with the
mahendo'sat -- a whole new kind of deal, Khym. Who's to know -- if
you stay on the ship; who's to question -- when we're not in home
territory? What do you think the mahendo'sat care for hani customs?
Not a thing." "Na Kohan -- " "What's it to Kohan?
You're my business, always were; he let you stay on Chanur land,
didn't he? If he did that, he'd care less about you light years
absent on a Chanur ship. And right now, what I want -- Kohan's going
to have a lot of patience with." He was listening, ears up
and all but trembling. "Think so, do you?" "What's downworld got
to. offer you? Sanctuary? Huh. Think you'd go crazy on a ship?
Unstable? Make trouble with the crew?" "No," he said
after a moment. And then: "Oh, gods rot it, Pyanfar, you can't
do something like that." "Afraid, Khym?" Ears went down. "No.
But I have consideration for you. I know what you're trying to do.
But you can't fight what is. Time, Pyanfar. We get old. The young
have their day. You can't fight time." "We're born fighting
it." He sat silent a moment.
The ears came up slowly. "One voyage, if the crew doesn't
object. Maybe one." "Be a while in port,
getting our tail put back together again. Getting navigational
details worked out. Then we go out again. A long voyage, this time." He looked up under his
brow. "It's different out
there," she said. "Not hani ways. No one species' way.
Right and wrong aren't the same. Attitudes aren't. I'll tell you
something." She crooked a claw and poked it at him. "Hani
downworld want their houses and their ways unquestioned, that's all.
They don't ask much what we do while the goods come in and don't cost
outlandish much; they don't care what we do either, so long as we
don't visibly embarrass the house. Kara's going to be upset. But
he'll live with it... when The Pride's light years out of sight and
mind. Might start a fashion. Might." "Dreamer," Khym
said. "Huh." She got
up, flicked her ears and waited to see him settled again. She walked
out then, weaving a bit in her steps and figuring she had about
strength enough to get to her own cabin and her own bath and her own
bed, in that order.
Tully came and went, among
his human comrades, and on The Pride. He did not, to Pyanfar's
surprise, cut his mane and shave his beard and walk about in human
clothes: he did go shod, but no more change than that. For the sake of
appearances, she thought; in respect of her one-time advice and the
opinion of the Llun (and of Chanur too, that brief time they paid a
downworld visit, to afford Kohan time with his favored daughter and a
view of their sponsored guests). Tully flourished -- grinned and
laughed and moved with a spring in his step quite strange in him. He
brought a solemn trio of humans off their ship to take notes aboard
The Pride -- Goldtooth attended with his own records -- to ask
questions and to exchange data until they had some navigational
referents in common. They frowned suspiciously,
these humans, but they stopped frowning when they learned precisely
where home was -- some distance beyond knnn space and kif. "Got between,"
Tully said enthusiastically, jabbing the chart which showed hani and
mahendo'sat territory, cupping one hand on the hani-mahendo'sat side
and one hand on the human side, with the kif neatly between. The
hands moved together slowly, clenched. "So." So, so, so, Pyanfar
thought, and her lips drew back and her nose wrinkled cheerfully. In time, he went, back to
his own . . . that last sealing of the lock which marked the
separation of the human ship from Gaohn. Ulysses, its name was, which
Tully had said meant Far-Voyages. Nearly fifty humans lived on it,
and whether they were related or not, she could not determine. They prepared to go. She
started back across the docks to The Pride, to follow -- with a
smallish cargo, nothing of great mass, but items of interest to
humans. There might be a chance to see Tully at voyage's end, but it
would hardly be the same. He belonged with his own, that was what,
and she did not begrudge him that. She planned to have use of
that acquaintance, Tully -- and the captain of this Far-Voyages. So,
of course, did Goldtooth, with his sleek refitted ship, going with
them, while Jik carried messages back to the Personage, no doubt, and
the mahendo'sat tried to figure out how to cheat an honest hani out
of exclusive arrangements. But the odds in that
encounter were even.
Copyright O 1981, 1982, by
C.J. Cherryh. All Rights Reserved. Map of Compact Space by
David A. Cherry. Cover art by Michael Whelan. For color prints of
Michael Whelan paintings, please contact: Glass Onion Graphics, P.O.
Box 88 Brookfield, CT 06804 DAW Book Collectors No.
464.
I There had been something
loose about the station dock all morning, skulking in amongst the
gantries and the lines and the canisters which were waiting to be
moved, lurking wherever shadows fell among the rampway accesses of
the many ships at dock at Meetpoint. It was pale, naked,
starved-looking in what fleeting glimpse anyone on The Pride of
Chanur had had of it. Evidently no one had reported it to station
authorities, nor did The Pride. Involving oneself in others' concerns
at Meetpoint Station, where several species came to trade and
provision, was ill-advised -- at least until one was personally
bothered. Whatever it was, it was bipedal, brachiate, and quick at
making itself unseen. It had surely gotten away from someone, and
likeliest were the kif, who had a thieving finger in everything, and
who were not above kidnapping. Or it might be some large, bizarre
animal: the mahendo'sat were inclined to the keeping and trade of
strange pets, and Station had been displeased with them in that
respect on more than one occasion. So far it had done nothing. Stolen
nothing. No one wanted to get involved in question and answer between
original owners and station authorities; and so far no official
statement had come down from those station authorities and no notice
of its loss had been posted by any ship, which itself argued that a
wise person should not ask questions. The crew reported it only to
the captain and chased it, twice, from The Pride's loading area. Then
the crew got to work on necessary duties, having settled the
annoyance to their satisfaction. It was the last matter on
the mind of the noble, the distinguished captain Pyanfar Chanur, who
was setting out down her own rampway for the docks. She was hani,
this captain, splendidly maned and bearded in red-gold, which reached
in silken curls to the middle of her bare, sleek-pelted chest, and
she was dressed as befitted a hani of captain's rank, blousing
scarlet breeches tucked up at her waist with a broad gold belt, with
silk cords of every shade of red and orange wrapping that about, each
knotted cord with a pendant jewel on its dangling end. Gold finished
the breeches at her knees. Gold filigree was her armlet. And a row of
fine gold rings and a large pendant pearl decorated the tufted sweep
of her left ear. She strode down her own rampway in the security of
ownership, still high-blooded from a quarrel with her niece -- and
yelled and bared claws as the intruder came bearing down on her. She landed one raking,
startled blow which would have held a hani in the encounter, but the
hairless skin tore and it hurtled past her, taller than she was. It
skidded round the bending of the curved ramp tube and bounded right
into the ship, trailing blood all the way and leaving a bloody
handprint on the rampway's white plastic wall. Pyanfar gaped in outrage
and pelted after, claws scrabbling for traction on the flooring
plates. "Hilfy!" she shouted ahead; her niece had been in
the lower corridor. Pyanfar made it into the airlock, hit the bar of
the com panel there and punched all-ship. "Alert! Hilfy! Call
the crew in! Something's gotten aboard. Seal yourself into the
nearest compartment and call the crew." She flung open the
locker next the com unit, grubbed a pistol and scrambled in pursuit
of the intruder. No trouble at all tracking it, with the dotted red
trail on the white decking. The track led left at the first
cross-corridor, which was deserted -- the intruder must have gone
left again, starting to box the square round the lift shafts. Pyanfar
ran, heard a shout from that intersecting corridor and scrambled for
it: Hilfy! She rounded the corner at a slide and came up short on a
tableau, the intruder's hairless, red-running back and young Hilfy
Chanur holding the corridor beyond with nothing but bared claws and
adolescent bluster. "Idiot!" Pyanfar
spat at Hilfy, and the intruder turned on her of a sudden, much
closer. It brought up short in a staggered crouch, seeing the gun
aimed two-handed at itself. It might have sense not to rush a weapon;
might . . . but that would turn it right back at Hilfy, who stood
unarmed behind. Pyanfar braced to fire on the least movement. It stood rigidly still in
its crouch, panting from its running and its wound. "Get out of
there," Pyanfar said to Hilfy. "Get back." The
intruder knew about hani claws now; and guns; but it might do
anything, and Hilfy, an indistinction in her vision which was
tunneled wholly on the intruder, stayed stubbornly still. "Move!"
Pyanfar shouted. The intruder shouted too,
a snarl which almost got it shot; and drew itself upright and
gestured to the center of its chest, twice, defiant. Go on and shoot,
it seemed to invite her. That intrigued Pyanfar.
The intruder was not attractive. It had a bedraggled gold mane and
beard, and its chest fur, almost invisible, narrowed in a line down
its heaving belly to vanish into what was, legitimately, clothing, a
rag almost nonexistent in its tatters and obscured by the dirt which
matched the rest of its hairless hide. Its smell was rank. But a
straight carriage and a wild-eyed invitation to its enemies . . .
that deserved a second thought. It knew guns; it wore at least a
token of clothing; it drew its line and meant to hold its territory.
Male, maybe. It had that over-the-brink look in its eyes. "Who are you?"
Pyanfar asked slowly, in several languages one after the other,
including kif. The intruder gave no sign of understanding any of
them. "Who?" she repeated. It crouched slowly, with a
sullen scowl, all the way to the deck, and extended a blunt-nailed
finger and wrote in its own blood which was liberally puddled about
its bare feet. It made a precise row of symbols, ten of them, and a
second row which began with the first symbol prefaced by the second,
second with second, second with third . . . patiently, with
increasing concentration despite the growing tremors of its hand,
dipping its finger and writing, mad fixation on its task. "What's it doing?"
asked Hilfy, who could not see from her side. "A writing system,
probably numerical notation. It's no animal, niece." The intruder looked up at
the exchange, -- stood up, an abrupt move which proved injudicious
after its loss of blood. A glassy, desperate look came into its eyes,
and it sprawled in the puddle and the writing, slipping in its own
blood in trying to get up again. "Call the crew,"
Pyanfar said levelly, and this time Hilfy scurried off in great
haste. Pyanfar stood where she was, pistol in hand, until Hilfy was
out of sight down another corridor, then, assured that there was no
one to see her lapse of dignity, she squatted down with the gun in
both hands and loosely between her knees. The intruder still
struggled, propped itself up with its bloody back against the wall,
elbow pressed against that deeper starting-point of the scratches on
its side, which was the source of most of the blood. Its pale blue
eyes, for all their glassiness, seemed to have sense in them. It
looked back at her warily, with seeming mad cynicism. "You speak kif?"
Pyanfar asked again. A flicker of those eyes, which might mean
anything. Not a word from it. It started shivering, which was shock
setting in. Sweat had broken out on its naked skin. It never ceased
to look at her. Running broke into the
corridors. Pyanfar stood up quickly, not to be caught thus engaged
with the creature. Hilfy came hurrying back from her direction, the
crew arriving from the other, and Pyanfar stepped aside as they
arrived and the intruder tried to scramble off in retreat. The crew
laid hands on it and jerked it skidding along the bloody puddle. It
cried out and tried to grapple with them, but they had it on its
belly in the first rush and a blow dazed it. "Gently!"
Pyanfar yelled at them, but they had it then, got its arms lashed at
its back with one of their belts, tied its ankles together and got
off it, their fur as bloody as the intruder, who continued a feeble
movement. "Do it no more
damage," Pyanfar said. "I'll have it clean, thank you,
watered, fed, and healthy, but keep it restrained. Prepare me
explanations how it got face to face with me in the rampway, and if
one of you bleats a word of this outside the ship I'll sell you to
the kif." "Captain," they
murmured, down-eared in deference. They were second and third cousins
of hers, two sets of sisters, one set large and one small, and
equally chagrined. "Out," she said.
They snatched the intruder up by the binding of its arms and prepared
to drag it. "Careful!" Pyanfar hissed, reminding them, and
they were gentler in pulling it along. "You," Pyanfar
said then to Hilfy, her brother's daughter, who lowered her ears and
turned her face aside -- short-maned, with an adolescent's beginning
beard, Hilfy Chanur presently and with a air of martyrdom. I'll send
you back shaved if you disobey another order. Understand me?" Hilfy made a bow facing
her, duly contrite. "Aunt," she said, and straightened,
contriving to make it all thoughtfully graceful; -- looked her
straight in the eyes with offended worship. "Huh," Pyanfar
said. Hilfy bowed a second time and padded past as softly as
possible. In common blue breeches like the crew, was Hilfy, but the
swagger was all Chanur, and not quite ludicrous on so young a woman.
Pyanfar snorted, fingered the silk of her beard into order, looked
down in sober thought at the wallowed smear where the Outsider had
fallen, obliterating all the writing from the eyes of the crew. So, so, so.
Pyanfar postponed her trip
to station offices, walked back to the lower-deck operations center,
sat down at the com board amid all the telltales of cargo status and
lines and grapples and the routine operations The Pride carried on
automatically. She keyed in the current messages, sorted through
those and found nothing, then delved into The Pride's recording of
all messages received since docking, and all which had flowed through
station communications aimed at others. She searched first for
anything kif-sent, a rapid flicker of lines on the screen in front of
her, all operational chatter in transcription -- a very great deal of
it. Then she queried for notice of anything lost, and after that, for
anything escaped. Mahendo'sat? she queried
then, staying constantly to her own ship's records of incoming
messages, of the sort which flowed constantly in a busy station, and
in no wise sending any inquiry into the station's comp system. She
recycled the whole record last of all, ran it past at eye-blurring
speed, looking for any key word about escapes or warnings of alien
presence at Meetpoint. So indeed. No one was
going to say a word on the topic. The owners still did not want to
acknowledge publicly that they had lost this item. The Chanur were
not lack-witted, to announce publicly that they had found it. Or to
trust that the kif or whoever had lost it were not at this moment
turning the station inside out with a surreptitious search. Pyanfar turned off the
machine, flicked her ears so that the rings on the left one jangled
soothingly. She got up and paced the center, thrust her hands into
her belt and thought about alternatives, and possible gains. It would
be a dark day indeed when a Chanur went to the kif to hand back an
acquisition. She could justifiably make a claim on it regarding legal
liabilities and the invasion of a hani ship. Public hazard, it was
called. But there were no outside witnesses to the intrusion, and the
kif, almost certainly to blame, would not yield without a wrangle;
which meant court;, and prolonged proximity to kif, whose gray,
wrinkle-hided persons she loathed; whose naturally dolorous faces she
loathed; whose jeremiad of miseries and wrongs done them was constant
and unendurable. A Chanur, in station court with a howling mob of kif
... and it would go to that extreme if kif came claiming this
intruder. The whole business was unpalatable, in all its
ramifications. Whatever it was and
wherever it came from, the creature was educated. That hinted in turn
at other things, at cogent reasons why the kif might indeed be upset
at the loss of this item and why they wished so little publicity in
the search. She punched in intraship. "Hilfy." "Aunt?"
Hilfy responded after a moment. "Find out the intruder's
condition." "I'm watching them treat it now. Aunt, I think
it's he, if there's any analogy of form and -- " "Never
mind zoology. How badly is it hurt?" "It's in shock, but it
seems stronger than it was a moment ago. It -- he -- got quiet when
we managed to get an anesthetic on the scratches. I think he figured
then we were trying to help, and he quit fighting. We thought the
drug had got him. But he's breathing better now." "It's probably just
waiting its chance. When you get it safely locked up, you take your
turn at dockwork, since you were so eager to have a look outside. The
others will show you what to do. Tell Haral to get herself to
lowerdeck op. Now." "Yes, aunt." Hilfy had no sulking
in her tone. The last reprimand must not have worn off. Pyanfar shut
down the contact and listened to station chatter in the interim,
wishing in vain for something to clarify the matter. Haral showed up on the
run, soaking wet, blood-spattered and breathless. She bowed shortly
in the doorway, straightened. She was oldest of the crew, was Haral,
tall, with a dark scar across her broad nose and another across the
belly, but those were from her rash youth. "Clean up,"
Pyanfar said. "Take cash and go marketing, cousin. Shop the
second-hand markets as if you were on your own. The item I want may
be difficult to locate, but not impossible, I think, in such a place
as Meetpoint. Some books, if you will: a mahendo'sat lexicon; a
mahendo'sat version of their holy writings. The philosopher
Kohboranua or another of that ilk, I'm completely indifferent. And a
mahendo'sat symbol translator, its modules and manuals, from
elementary up, as many levels as you can find . . . above all that
item. The rest is all cover. If questioned -- a client's taken a
religious interest." Haral's, eyes flickered,
but she bowed in acceptance of the order and asked nothing. Pyanfar
put her hand deep into her pocket and came up with a motley
assortment of large-denomination coinage, a whole stack of it. "And four gold
rings," Pyanfar added. "Captain?" "To remind you all
that The Pride minds its own business. Say so when you give them.
It'll salve your feelings, I hope, if we have to miss taking a
liberty here, as well we may. But talk and rouse suspicion about
those items, Haral Araun, and you won't have an ear to wear it on." Haral grinned and bowed a
third time. "Go," said
Pyanfar, and Haral darted out in zealous application. So. It was a risk, but a
minor one. Pyanfar considered matters for a moment, finally walked
outside the op room and down the corridor, took the lift up to
central level, where her own quarters were, out of the stench and the
reek of disinfectant which filled the lower deck. She closed the door behind
her with a sigh, went to the bath and washed her hands, seeing that
there remained no shred of flesh in the undercurve of her claws --
checked over her fine silk breeches to be sure no spatter of blood
had gotten on them. She applied a dash of cologne to clear the memory
from her nostrils. Stupidity. She was getting
dull as the stsho, to have missed a grip on the intruder in the first
place: old was not a word she preferred to think about. Slow of mind,
woolgathering, that she struck like a youngster on her first forage.
Lazy. That was more like it. She patted her flat belly and decided
that the year-old complacent outletting of her belt had to be taken
in again. She was losing her edge. Her brother Kohan was still fit
enough, planet-bound as he was and not gifted with the time-stretch
of jump: he managed. Inter-male bickering and a couple of sons to
throw out of the domicile kept his blood circulating, and there was
usually a trio of mates in the house at any one time, with offspring
to chastise. About time, she thought, that she put The Pride into
home dock at Anuurn for a thorough refitting, and spend a layover
with her own mate Khym, high in the Kahin hills, in the Mahn estates.
Get the smell of the homeworld wind in her nostrils for a few months.
Do a little hunting, run off that extra notch on the belt. Check on
her daughter Tahy and see whether that son of hers was still roving
about or whether someone had finally broken his neck for him. Surely
the lad would have had the common courtesy to send a message through
Khym or Kohan if he had settled somewhere; and above all to her
daughter, who was, gods knew, grown and getting soft hanging about
her father's house, among a dozen other daughters, mostly
brotherless. Son Kara should settle himself with some unpropertied
wife and give his sister some gainful employment making him rich --
above all, settle and take himself out of his father's and his
uncle's way. Ambitious, that was Kara. Let the young rake try to move
in on his uncle Kohan and that would be the last of him. Pyanfar
flexed claws at the thought and recalled why all her shoreleaves were
short ones. But this now, this
business with this bit of live contraband which had strayed aboard,
which might be kif-owned . . . the honorable lord Kohan Chanur her
brother was going to have a word to say about his ship's carelessness
in letting such an incident reach their deck. And there was going to
be a major rearrangement in the household if Hilfy got hurt --
brotherless ; Hilfy, who had gotten to be too much Chanur to go
following after a brother if ever her mother gave her one. Hilfy
Chanur par Faha, who wanted the stars more than she wanted anything;
and who clung to her father as the one who could give them to her. It
was Hilfy's lifelong waited chance, this voyage, this apprenticeship
on The Pride. It had torn Kohan's doting soul to part from his
favorite; that was clear in the letter which had come with Hilfy. Pyanfar shook her head and
fretted. Depriving those four rag-eared crew of hers of a shoreleave
in the pursuit of this matter was one thing, but taking Hilfy home to
Anuurn while she sorted out a major quarrel with the kif was another.
It was expensive, curtailing their homeward routing. More, Hilfy's
pride would die a death, if she were the cause of that rerouting, if
she were made to face her sisters in her sudden return to the
household; and Pyanfar confessed herself attached to the imp, who
wanted what she had wanted at such an age, who most likely would come
to command a Chanur ship someday, perhaps even -- gods postpone the
hour -- The Pride itself. Pyanfar thought of such a legacy . . .
someday, someday that Kohan passed his prime and she did. Others in
the house of Chanur were jealous of Hilfy, waiting for some chance to
use their jealousy. But Hilfy was the best. The brightest and best,
like herself and like Kohan, and no one so far could prove otherwise.
Whatever young male one day won the Chanur holding from Kohan in his
decline had best walk warily and please Hilfy, or Hilfy might take
herself a mate who would tear the ears off the interloper. That was
the kind Hilfy was, loyal to her father and to the house. And ruining that spirit or
risking her life over that draggled Outsider was not worth it. Maybe,
Pyanfar thought, she should swallow the bitter mouthful and go dump
the creature on the nearest kif ship. She seriously considered it.
Choosing the wrong kif ship might afford some lively amusement: there
would be riot among the kif and consternation on the station. But
yielding was still, at bottom, distasteful. Gods! so that was how she
proposed teaching young Hilfy to handle difficulties. That was the
example she set... yielding up what she had, because she thought it
might be dangerous to hold it. She was getting soft. She
patted her belly again, decided against shoreleave at voyage's end,
another lying-up and another Mahn offspring to muddle things up.
Decided against retreat. She drew in a great breath and put on a grim
smile. Age came and the young grew old, but not too old, the gods
grant. This voyage, young Hilfy Chanur was going to learn to justify
that swagger she cut through the corridors of the ship; so, indeed
she was.
There was no leaving the
ship with matters aboard still in flux. Pyanfar went to the small
central galley, up the starboard curve from her quarters and the
bridge, stirred about to take a cup of gfi from the dispenser and sat
down at the counter by the oven to enjoy it at leisure, waiting until
her crew should have had ample time to have dealt with the Outsider.
She gave them a bit more, finally tossed the empty cup in the
sterilizer and got up and wandered belowdecks again, where the
corridors stank strongly of antiseptic and Tirun was lounging about,
leaning against the wall by the lowerdeck washroom door. "Well?"
Pyanfar asked. "We put it in there,
captain. Easiest to clean, by your leave. Haral left. Chur and Geran
and ker Hilfy are out doing the loading. Thought someone ought to
stay awhile by the door and listen, to be sure the creature's all
right." Pyanfar laid her hand on
the switch, looked back at Tirun -- Haral's sister and as broad and
solid, with the scars of youth well-weathered, the gold of successful
voyages winking from her left ear. The two of them together could
handle the Outsider, she reckoned, in any condition. "Does it
show any sign of coming out of its shock?" "It's quiet; shallow
breathing, staring somewhere else -- but aware what's going on.
Scared us a moment; we thought it'd gone into shock with the
medicine, but I think it just quieted down when the pain stopped. We
tried with the way we handled it, to make it understand we didn't
want to hurt it. Maybe it has that figured. We carried it in here and
it settled down and lay still . . . moved when made to move, but not
surly, more like it's stopped thinking, like it's stopped doing
anything it doesn't have to do. Worn out, I'd say." "Huh." Pyanfar
pressed the bar. The dark interior of the washroom smelled of
antiseptic too, the strongest they had. The lights were dimmed. The
air was stiflingly warm and carried an odd scent under the antiseptic
reek. Her eyes missed the creature a moment, searched anxiously and
located it in the corner, a heap of blankets between the shower stall
and the laundry . . . asleep or awake she could not tell with its
head tucked down in its forearms. A large container of water and a
plastic dish with a few meat chips and crumbs left rested beside it
on the tiles. Well, again. It was then carnivorous and not so
delicate after all, to have an appetite left. So much for its
collapse. "Is it restrained?" "It has chain enough
to get to the head if it understands what it's for." Pyanfar stepped back
outside and closed the door on it again. "Very likely it
understands. Tirun, it is sapient or I'm blind. Don't assume it can't
manipulate switches. No one is to go in there alone and no one's to
carry firearms near it. Pass that order to the others personally,
Hilfy too. -- Especially Hilfy." "Yes, captain."
Tirun's broad face was innocent of opinions. Gods knew what they were
going to do with the creature if they kept it. Tirun did not ask.
Pyanfar strolled off, meditating on the scene behind the washroom
door, the heap of deceptive blankets, the food so healthily consumed,
the avowed collapse ... no lackwit, this creature who had twice tried
her ship's security and on the third attempt, .succeeded in getting
through. Why The Pride? she wondered. Why her ship, out of all the
others at dock? Because they were last in the section, before the
bulkhead of the dock seal might force the creature to have left cover
somewhat, and it was the last available choice? Or was there some
other reason? She walked the corridor to
the airlock and the rampway, and out its curving ribbed length into
the chill air of the docks. She looked left as she came out, and
there was Hilfy, canister-loading with Chur and Geran, rolling the
big cargo containers off the stationside dolly and onto the moving
belt which would take the goods into The Pride's holds, paid freight
on its way to Urtur and Kura and Touin and Anuurn itself, stsho
cargo, commodities and textiles and medicines, ordinary stuff. Hilfy
paused at the sight of her, panting with her efforts and already
looking close to collapse -- stood up straight with her hands at her
sides and her ears back, belly heaving. It was hard work, shifting
those cans about, especially for the unskilled and unaccustomed. Chur
and Geran worked on, small of stature and wiry, knowing the points of
balance to an exactitude. Pyanfar affected not to notice her niece
and walked on with wide steps and nonchalant, smiling to herself the
while. Hilfy had been mightily indignant, barred from rushing out to
station market, to roam about unescorted, sightseeing on this her
first call at Meetpoint, where species docked which never called at
homeworld . . . sights she had missed at Urtur and Kura, likewise
pent aboard ship or held close to The Pride's berth. The imp had too
much enthusiasm for her own good. So she got the look at Meetpoint's
famous docks she had argued to have, now, this very day -- but not
the sightseeing tour of her young imaginings. Next station-call, Pyanfar
thought, next station-call her niece might have learned enough to let
loose unescorted, when the wild-eyed eagerness had worn off, when she
had learned from this incident that there were hazards on dockside
and that a little caution was in order when prowling the friendliest
of ports. Herself, she took the
direct route, not without watching her surroundings.
II A call on Meetpoint
Station officials was usually a leisurely and pleasant affair. The
stsho, placid and graceful, ran the station offices and bureaus on
this side of the station, where oxygen breathers docked. Methodical
to a fault, the stsho, tedious and full of endless subtle meanings in
their pastel ornament and the tattooings on their pearly hides. They
were another hairless species -- stalk-thin, tri-sexed and hanilike
only by the wildest stretch of the imagination, if eyes, nose, and
mouth in biologically convenient order was similarity. Their manners
were bizarre among themselves. But stsho had learned to suit their
methodical plodding and their ceremoniousness to hani taste, which
was to have a soft chair, a ready cup of herbal tea, a plate of
exotic edibles and an individual as pleasant as possible about the
forms and the statistics, who could make it all like a social chat. This stsho was unfamiliar.
Stsho changed officials more readily than they changed ornament --
either a different individual had come into control of Meetpoint
Station, Pyanfar reckoned, or a stsho she had once known had entered
a New Phase, -- new doings? Pyanfar wondered, at the nudge of a small
and prickly instinct -- new doings? Loose Outsiders and stsho power
shuffles? All changes were suspect when something was out of pocket.
If it was the same as the previous stationmaster, it had changed the
pattern of all the elaborate silver filigree and plumes -- azure and
lime now, not azure and mint; and if it were the case, it was not at
all polite to recognize the refurbished person, even if a hani
suspected identity. The stsho proffered
delicacies and tea, bowed, folded up gtst stalklike limbs -- he, she,
or even it, hardly applied with stsho -- and seated gtst-self in gtst
bowlchair, a cushioned indentation in the office floor. The necessary
table rose on a pedestal before it. Pyanfar occupied the facing
depression, lounged on an elbow to reach for the smoked fish the
stsho's lesser-status servant had placed on a similar table at her
left. The servant, ornamentless and no one, sat against the wall,
knees tucked higher than gtst head, arms about bony ankles, waiting
usefulness. The stsho official likewise took a sample of the fish,
poured tea, graceful gestures of stsho elegance and hospitality.
Plumed and cosmetically augmented brows nodded delicately over
moonstone eyes as gtst looked up -- white brows shading to lilac and
azure; azure tracings on the domed brow shaded to lime over the
hairless skull. Another stsho, of course, might read the patterns
with exactitude, the station in life, the chosen Mood for this Phase
of gtst existence, the affiliations and modes and thereby, gtst
approachability. Non-stsho were forgiven their trespasses; and stsho
in Retiring mode were not likely filling public offices. Pyanfar made one attempt
on the Outsider topic, delicately: "Things have been quiet
hereabouts?" "Oh, assuredly."
The stsho beamed, smiled with narrow mouth and narrow eyes, a
carnivore habit, though the stsho were not aggressive. "Assuredly." "Also on my world,"
Pyanfar said, and sipped her tea, an aroma of spices which delighted
all her sinuses. "Herbal. But what?" The stsho smiled with
still more breadth. "Ah. Imported from my world. We introduce it
here, in our offices. Duty free. New cultivation techniques make it
available for export. The first time, you understand. The very first
shipment offered. Very rare, a taste of my very distant world."
"Cost?" They discussed it. It was
outrageous. But the stsho came down, predictably, particularly when
tempted with a case of hani delicacies promised to be carted up from
dockside to the offices. Pyanfar left the necessary interview in high
spirits. Barter was as good to her as breathing. She took the lift down to
dock level, straight down, without going the several corridors over
in lateral which she could have taken. She walked the long way back
toward The Pride's berth, strolled casually along the dockside which
horizoned upward before and behind, unfurling as she moved, offices
and businesses on the one hand and the tall mobile gantries on the
other, towers which aimed their tops toward the distant axis of
Meetpoint, so that the most distant appeared insanely atilt on the
curving horizon. Display boards at periodic intervals gave
information of arrivals, departures, and ships in dock, from what
port and bearing what sort of cargo, and she scanned them as she
walked. A car shot past her on the
dock, from behind: globular and sealed, it wove along avoiding
canisters and passers-by and lines with greater speed than an
automated vehicle would use. That was a methane-breather, more than
likely, some official from beyond the dividing line which separated
the incompatible realities of Meetpoint. Tc'a ran that side of the
station, sinuous beings and leathery gold, utterly alien in their
multipartite brains -- they traded with the knnn and the chi, kept
generally to themselves and had little to say or to do with hani or
even with the stsho, with whom they shared the building and operation
of Meetpoint. Tc'a had nothing in common with this side of the line,
not even ambitions; and the knnn and the chi were stranger still,
even less participant within the worlds and governments and
territories of the Compact. Pyanfar watched the vehicle kite along,
up the horizon of Meetpoint's docks, and the section seal curtained
it from view as it jittered along in zigzag haste which itself argued
a tc'a mind at the controls. There was no trouble from them ... no
way that they could have dealt with the Outsider: their brains were
as unlike as their breathing apparatus. She paused, stared up at the
nearby registry boards with a wrinkling of her nose and a stroking of
her beard, sorting through the improbable and untranslatable
methane-breather names for more familiar registrations -- for
potential trouble, and for possible allies of use in a crisis. There
was scant picking among the latter at this apogee of The Pride's
rambling course. There was one other hani
ship in dock, Handur's Voyager. She knew a few of the Handur family,
remotely. They were from Anuurn's other hemisphere, neither rivals
nor close allies, since they shared nothing on Anuurn's surface.
There were a lot of stsho ships, which was to be expected on this
verge of stsho space. A lot of mahendo'sat, through whose territory
The Pride had lately come. And on the side of
trouble, there were four kif, one of which she knew: Kut, captained
by one Ikkkukkt, an aging scoundrel whose style was more to allow
another ship's canisters to edge up against and among his on
dockside; and to bluff down any easily confused owners who might
protest. He was only small trouble, alone. Kif in groups could be
different, and she did not know about the others. "Hai," she
called, passing a mahendo'sat docking area, at a ship called
Mahijiru, where some of that tall, dark-furred kind were minding
their own business, cursing and scratching their heads over some
difficulty with a connection collar, a lock-ring disassembled in
order all over the deck among their waiting canisters. "You fare
well this trip, mahe?" "Ah, captain."
The centermost scrambled up and others did the same as this one
stepped toward her, treading carefully among the pieces of the
collar. Any well-dressed hani was captain to a mahendo'sat, who had
rather err by compliment than otherwise. But this one by his gilt
teeth was likely the captain of his own freighter. "You trade?" "Trade what?" "What got?" "Hai, mahe, what
need?" The mahendo'sat grinned, a
brilliant golden flash, sharp-edged. No one of course began trade by
admitting to necessity. "Need a few less kif
onstation." Pyanfar answered her own question, and the
mahendo'sat whistled laughter and bobbed agreement. "True, true,"
Goldtooth said somewhere between humor and outrage, as if he had a
personal tale to tell. "Whining kif we wish you end of dock,
good captain, honest captain. Kut no good. Hukan more no good; and
Lukkur same. But Hinukku make new kind deal no good. Wait at station,
wait no get same you course with Hinukku, good captain." "What, armed?" "Like hani, maybe."
Goldtooth grinned when he said it, and Pyanfar laughed, pretended it
a fine joke. "When do hani ever
have weapons?" she asked. The mahe thought that a
fine joke too. "Trade you two
hundredweight silk," Pyanfar offered. "Station duty take
all my profit." "Ah. Too bad. -- Hard
work, that." She scuffed a foot toward the ailing collar. "I
can lend you very good hani tools, fine steel, two very good hani
welders, Faha House make." "I lend you good
quality artwork." "Artwork!" "Maybe someday great
mahen artist, captain." "Then come to me;
I'll keep my silk." "Ah, ah, I make you
favor with artwork, captain, but no, I ask you take no chance. I have
instead small number very fine pearl like you wear." "Ah." "Make you security
for lend tools and welders. My man he come by you soon borrow tools.
Show you pearl same time." "Five pearls." "We see tools you see
two pearls." "You bring four." "Fine. You pick best
three." "All four if they're
not of the best, my good, my great mahe captain." "You see," he
vowed. "Absolute best. Three." "Good." She
grinned cheerfully, touched hand to hand with the thick-nailed mahe
and strolled off, grinning still for all passersby to see; but the
grin faded when she was past the ring of their canisters and crossing
the next berth. So. Kif trouble had
docked. There were kif and kif, and in that hierarchy of thieves,
there were a few ship captains who tended to serve as ringleaders for
highstakes mischief; and some elect who were very great trouble
indeed. Mahendo'sat translation always had its difficulties, but it
sounded uncomfortably like one of the latter. Stay in dock, the
mahendo'sat had advised; don't chance putting out till it leaves.
That was mahendo'sat strategy. It did not always work. She could keep
The Pride at dock and run up a monstrous bill, and still have no
guarantee of a safe course out; or she could pull out early and hope
that the kif would not suspect what they had aboard -- hope that the
kif, at minimum, were waiting for something easier to chew than a
mouthful of hani. Hilfy. That worry rode her
mind. Ten quiet voyages, ten voyages of aching, bone-weary
tranquility . . . and now this one. The docks looked all quiet ahead,
up where The Pride had docked, her people working out by the loading
belt as they should be doing, taking aboard the mail and the freight.
Haral was back, working among them; she was relieved to see that.
That was Tirun outside now, and Hilfy must have gone in: the other
two were Geran and Chur, slight figures next to Haral and Tirun. She
found no cause to hurry. Hilfy had probably had enough by now,
retreated inside to guard duty over the Outsider, gods grant that she
stayed outside the door and refrained from meddling. But the crew caught sight
of her as she came, and of a sudden expressions took on desperate
relief and ears pricked up, so that her heart clenched with
foreknowledge of something direly wrong. "Hilfy," she asked
first, as Haral came walking out to meet her: the other three stayed
at their loading, all too busy for those looks of anxiety, playing
the part of workers thoroughly occupied. "Ker Hilfy's safe
inside," Haral said quickly. "Captain, I got the things you
ordered, put them in lowerdeck op, all of it; but there were kif
everywhere I went, captain, when I was off in the market. They were
prowling about the aisles, staring at everyone, buying nothing. I
finished my business and walked on back and they were still prowling
about. So I ordered ker Hilfy to go on in and send Tirun out here.
There are kif nosing about here of a sudden." "Doing what?" "Look beyond my
shoulder, captain." Pyanfar took a quick look,
a shift of her eyes. "Nothing," she said. But canisters
were piled there at the section seal, twenty, thirty of them, each as
tall as a hani and double-stacked, cover enough. She set her hand on
Haral's shoulder, walked her companionably back to the others.
"Haral, there's going to be a small stsho delivery and a
mahendo'sat with a three-pearl deal; both are true . . . watch them
both. But no others. There's one other hani ship docked far around
the rim, next the methane docks. I've not spoken with them. It's
Handur's Voyager." "Small ship." "And vulnerable.
We're going to take The Pride out, with all decent haste. I think it
can only get worse here. Tirun: a small task; get to Voyager. I don't
want to discuss the situation with them over com. Warn them that
there's a ship in dock named Hinukku and the word is out among the
mahendo'sat that this one is uncommonly bad trouble. And then get
yourself back here fast -- No, wait. A good tool kit and two good
welders -- drop them with the crew of the Mahijiru and take the
pearls in a hurry if you can get them. Seventh berth down. They'll
deserve that and more if I've put the kif onto them by asking
questions there. Go." "Yes, captain,"
Tirun breathed, and scurried off, ears back, up the service ramp
beside the cargo belt. Pyanfar cast a second look
at the double-stacked canisters in turning. No kif in sight. Haste,
she wished Tirun, hurry it. It was a quick trip inside to pull the
trade items from the automated delivery. Tirun came back with the
boxes under one arm and set out directly in the kind of reasonable
haste she might use on her captain's order. "Huh." Pyanfar
turned again and looked toward the shadow. There. By the canisters
after all. A kif stood there, tall and black-robed, with a long
prominent snout and hunched stature. Pyanfar stared at it directly --
waved to it with energetic and sarcastic camaraderie as she started
toward it. It stepped at once back
into the shelter of the canisters and the shadows. Pyanfar drew a
great breath, flexed her claws and kept walking, round the curve of
the canister stacks and softly -- face to face with the towering kif.
The kif looked down on her with its red-rimmed dark eyes and
longnosed face and its dusty black robes like the robes of all other
kif, of one tone with the gray skin ... a bit of shadow come to life.
"Be off," she told it. "I'll have no canister-mixing.
I'm onto your tricks." "Something of ours
has been stolen." She laughed, helped by
sheer surprise. "Something of yours stolen, master thief? That's
a wonder to tell at home." "Best it find its way
back to us. Best it should, captain." She laid back her ears and
grinned, which was not friendliness. "Where is your
crewwoman going with those boxes?" the kif asked. She said nothing. Extruded
claws. "It would not be,
Captain, that you've somehow found that lost item." "What, lost, now?" "Lost and found
again, I think." "What ship are you,
kif?" "If you were as
clever as you imagine you are, captain, you would know." "I like to know who
I'm talking to. Even among kif. I'll reckon you know my name,
skulking about out here. What's yours?" "Akukkakk is mine,
Chanur captain. Pyanfar Chanur. Yes, we know you. Know you well,
captain. We have become interested in you . . . thief." "Oh. Akukkakk of what
ship?" Her vision sharpened on the kif, whose robes were
marginally finer than usual, whose bearing had precious little kifish
stoop in dealing with shorter species, that hunch of shoulders and
thrusting forward of the head. This one looked at her the long way,
from all its height. "I'd like to know you as well, kif." "You will, hani. --
No. A last chance. We will redeem this prize you've found. I will
make you that offer." Her mustache-hairs drew
down, as at some offensive aroma. "Interesting if I had this
item. Is it round or flat, this strayed object? Or did one of your
own crew rob you, kif captain?" "You know its shape,
since you have it. Give it up, and be paid. Or don't -- and be paid,
hani, be paid then too." "Describe this item
to me." "For its safe return
-- gold, ten bars of gold, fine. Contrive your own descriptions." "I shall bear it in
mind, kif, should I find something unusual and kif-smelling. But so
far nothing." "Dangerous, hani." "What ship, kif?" "Hinukku." "I'll remember your
offer. Indeed I will, master thief." The kif said nothing more.
Towered erect and silent. She aimed a dry spitting toward its feet
and walked off, slow swagger. Hinukku, indeed. A whole
new kind of trouble, the mahendo'sat had said, and this surly kif or
another might have seen ... or talked to those who had seen. Gold,
they offered. Kif . . . offered ransom; and no common kif, either,
not that one. She walked with a prickling between her shoulder blades
and a multiplying apprehension for Tirun, who was now a small figure
walking off along the upcurving docks. No hope that the station
authorities would do anything to prevent a murder ... not one between
kif and hani. The stsho's neutrality consisted in retreat, and their
law in arbitrating after the fact. Stsho ships were the most
common victims of marauding kif, and still kif docked unchecked at
Meetpoint. Madness. A bristling ran up her back and her ears flicked,
jingling the rings. Hani might deal with the kif and teach them a
lesson, but there was no profit in it, not until moments like this
one. Divert every hani ship from profitable trade to kif-hunting?
Madness too ... until it was The Pride in question. "Pack it up out
here," she told her remaining crew when she reached them. "Get
those last cans on and shut it down. Get everything ready to break
dock. I'm going to call Tirun back here. It's worse than I thought." "I'll go after her,"
Haral said. "Do as I say, cousin
-- and keep Hilfy out of it." Haral fell back. Pyanfar
started off down the dock -- old habit, not to run; a reserve of
pride, of caution, of some instinct either good or ill. Still she did
not run in front of witnesses. She widened her strides until some
bystanders -- stsho -- did notice, and stared. She gained on Tirun.
Almost, almost within convenient shouting distance of Tirun, and
still a far, naked distance up the dock's upcurving course to reach
Handur's Voyager. Hinukku sat at dock for Tirun to pass before she
should come to the hani ship. But the mahendo'sat vessel Mahijiru was
docked before that, if only Tirun handled that extraneous errand on
the way, the logical thing to do with a heavy load under one arm.
Surely it was the logical thing, even considering the urgency of the
other message. Ah. Tirun did stop at the
mahendo'sat berth. Pyanfar breathed a gasp of relief, broke her own
rule at the last moment and sprinted behind some canisters, strode
right into the gathering which had begun to close about Tirun. She
clapped a startled mahendo'sat spectator on the arm, pulled it about
and thrust her way through to Tirun, grabbed her arm without
ceremony. "Trouble. Let's go, cousin." "Captain,"
Goldtooth exclaimed from her right. "You come back make new
bigger deal?" "Never mind. The
tools are a gift. Come on, Tirun." "Captain," Tirun
began, bewildered, being dragged back through the gathering of
mahendo'sat. Mahendo'sat gave way before them, their captain still
following them with confused chatter about welders and pearls. Kif. A black-clad half
ring of them appeared suddenly on the outskirts of the swirl of
dark-furred mahendo'sat. Pyanfar had Tirun's wrist and pulled her
forward. "Look out!" Tirun cried suddenly: one of the kif
had pulled a gun from beneath its robe. "Go!" Pyanfar
yelled, and they dived back among cursing and screaming mahendo'sat,
out again through a melee of kif who had circled behind the
canisters. Fire popped after them. Pyanfar bowled over a kif in their
path with a strike that should snap vertebrae and did not break
stride to find out. Tirun ran beside her; they sprinted with fire
popping smoke curls off the deck plates ahead of them. Suddenly a shot came from
the right hand. Tirun yelped and stumbled, limping wildly. More kif
along the dockfront offices, one very tall and familiar. Akukkakk,
with friends. "Earless bastard!" Pyanfar shouted, grabbed
Tirun afresh and kept going, dragged her behind the canisters of
another mahendo'sat ship in a hail of laser pops and the reek of
burned plastic. Tirun sagged in shock -- a curse and a jerk on the
arm got her running again, desperately: the burn ruptured and bled.
They darted an open space, having no choice: shrill harooing rang out
behind and on the right, kif on the hunt. A second shout roared out
from before them, another flash from guns, multicolor, at The Pride's
berth: The Pride's crew was returning fire, high for their sakes but
meaning business. Station alarms started going off, bass-tone
whooping. Red lights flashed on the walls and up the curve till the
ceiling vanished. Higher up the curve of the dock, station folk
scrambled in panic, hunting shelter. If there were kif among them,
they would come charging down from that direction too, at the crew's
backs. And Hilfy was out there at
that access, fourth in that line of their own guns -- laying down a
berserk pattern of fire. Pyanfar dragged Tirun through that line of
four by the scruff of the neck. Tirun twisted and fell on the plates
and Pyanfar helped her up again, not without a wild look back, at a
dockside where enemies fired from cover at her crew who had precious
little. "Board!" she yelled at the others with the last of
her wind, and herself skidded on the decking in turning for the
rampway. Haral retreated and grabbed Tirun's flailing arm from the
other side and Hilfy suddenly took Pyanfar's. Pyanfar looked back
again, willing to turn and fight. Geran and Chur were falling back in
orderly retreat behind them, still facing the direction of the kif
and firing -- the kif had been pinned back from advance into better
vantage. Hilfy pulled at her arm and Pyanfar shook free as they
reached the rampway's first door. "Come on," she shouted at
Geran and Chur; and the moment they retreated within, still firing,
she hit the door seal. The massive steel clanged and thumped shut and
the pair stumbled back out of the way; Hilfy darted in from across
the door and rammed the lock-lever down. Pyanfar looked round then
at Tirun, who was on her feet though sagging in Haral's arms, and
holding her upper right leg. Her blue breeches were dark with blood
from there to the fur of her calf and threading down to her foot in a
puddle, and she was muttering a steady stream of curses. "Move," Pyanfar
said. Haral took Tirun up in her arms and outright carried her, no
small load. They withdrew up the rampway curve into their own lock,
sealed that door and felt somewhat safer. "Captain," Chur
said, businesslike. "All lines are loose and cargo ramp is
disengaged. In case." "Well done,"
Pyanfar said, vastly relieved to hear it. They walked through the
airlock and round the bend into the main lower corridor. "Secure
the Outsider; sedate it all the way. You -- " she looked aside
at Tirun, who was trying to walk again with an arm across her
sister's shoulders. "Get a wrap on that leg fast. No time for
anything more. We're getting loose. I don't imagine Hinukku will
stand still for this and I don't want kif passing my tail while we're
nose-to-station. Everyone rig for maneuvers." "I can wrap my own
leg," Tirun said. "Just drop me in sickbay." "Hilfy," Pyanfar
said, collected her niece as she headed for the lift. "Disobedient,"
Pyanfar muttered when they were close. "Forgive," said
Hilfy. They entered the lift together; the door shut. Pyanfar fetched
the youngster a cuff which rocked her against the lift wall, and
pushed the mainlevel button. Hilfy righted herself and disdained even
to clap a hand to her ear, but her eyes were watering, her ears
flattened and nostrils wide as if she were facing into some powerful
wind. "Forgiven," said Pyanfar. The lift let them out, and
Hilfy started to run up the corridor toward the bridge, but Pyanfar
stalked along at a more deliberate pace and Hilfy paused and matched
her stride, walked with her through the archway into the curved-deck
main operations center. Pyanfar sat down in her
cushion in the center of a bank of vid screens and started turning on
systems. Station was squalling stsho language protests, objections,
outrage. "Get on that," Pyanfar said to her niece without
missing a beat in switch-flicking. "Tell station we're cutting
loose and they'll have to cope with it." A delay. Hilfy relayed the
message in limping stsho, ignoring the mechanical translator in her
haste. "They complain you killed someone." "Good." The
grapples clanged loose and a telltale said they had retracted all the
way. "Tell them we rejoice to have eliminated a kif who started
firing without provocation, endangering bystanders and property on
the dock." She fired the undocking repulse and they were loose,
sudden loss of g and reacquisition in another direction . . . fired
the secondaries which sent The Pride out of plane with station, a
redirection of up and down. Ship's g started up, a slow tug against
the thrust aft. "Station is mightily
upset," Hilfy reported. "They demand to talk to you, aunt;
they threaten not to let us dock at stsho -- " "Never mind the
stsho." Pyanfar flicked from image to image on scan. She spotted
another ship loose, in about the right location for Hinukku. Abruptly
the scan acquired all kinds of flitter on it, chaff more than likely,
as Hinukku screened itself to do something. "Gods rot them."
She reached madly for controls and got The Pride reoriented gently
enough to save the bones of those aboard who might not yet be secured
for maneuvers . . . warning enough for those below to dive for
security. "If they fire on us they'll take out half the station.
Gods!" She hit general com. "Brace; we're backing hard." This time things came
loose. A notebook sailed across the section and landed somewhere
forward, missing controls. Hilfy spat and curses came back from com.
The Pride was not made for such moves. Nor for the next, which
hammered against that backward momentum and, nose dipped, shot them
nadir of station (the notebook flew back to its origins) and braked,
another career of fluttering pages. "Motherless
bastards," Pyanfar said. She punched controls, linked turret to
scan. It would swivel to any sighting, anything massive. "Now
let them put their nose down here." Her joints were sore. Alarms
were ringing and lights were flashing on the maintenance board, cargo
having broken loose. She ran her tongue over the points of her teeth
and wrinkled her nose for breath, worrying what quadrant of the scan
to watch. She put The Pride into a slow axis rotation, gambling that
the kif would not come underside of station in so obvious a place as
the one in line with last-known-position. "Watch scan," she
warned Hilfy, diverting herself to monitor the op board half a
heartbeat, to see all the telltales what they ought to be. "Haral,
get up here." "Aunt!" Hilfy
said. Pyanfar swung her head about again. A little dust had appeared
on the screen, some of the chaff spinning their way from above. She
had the scanlinked fire control set looser than that and the armament
did not react. The lift back down the corridor crashed and hummed in
operation. Haral had not acknowledged, but she was coming. "We
fire on anything that shows solid," Pyanfar said. "Keep
watching that chaff cloud, niece. And mind, it could be outright
diversion. I don't trust anything." "Yes," Hilfy
said calmly enough. And then: "Look out!" "Chaff," Pyanfar
identified the flutter, her heart frozen by the yell. "Be
specific to quadrant: number's enough." Running feet in the
corridor. Haral was with them. Hilfy started to yield her place at
scan; Haral slid into the third seat, adjusted the restraints. "Didn't plan to do so
much moving," Pyanfar said, never taking the focus of her eyes
from scan. "Anyone hurt?" "No," said
Haral. "Everything's secure." "They're thinking it
over up there," Pyanfar said. "Aunt! 4/2!" Turret was swiveling. Eye
tracked to the number four screen. Energy washed over station's rim:
more chaff followed, larger debris. "Captain, they hit
station." Haral's voice was incredulous. "They fired." "Handur's Voyager."
Pyanfar had the origin mapped on the station torus and made the
connection. "O gods." She hit repulse and sent them
hurtling to station core shadow, tilted their nose with a second
burst and cut in main thrust, shooting them nadir of station, nose
for infinity. Pyanfar reached and uncapped a red switch, hit it, and
The Pride rocked with explosion. "What was that?"
Hilfy's voice. "Are we hit?" "I just dumped our
holds." Pyanfar sucked air, an expansion of her nostrils. Her
claws flexed out and in on the togglegrip. G was hauling at them
badly. The Pride of Chanur was in full rout, having just altered
their mass/drive ratio, stripped for running. "Haral, get us a
course." "Working," Haral
said. Numbers started coming up on the comp screen at Pyanfar's left. "Going to have to
find us a quiet spot." "Urtur's just within
singlejump range," Haral said, "stripped as we are. Maybe." "Has to be."
Beyond Meetpoint in the other direction was stsho space, with a great
scarcity of jump points to help them along, those masses by which The
Pride or any other jumpship steered; and on other sides were kif
regions; and knnn; and unexplored regions, uncharted, without jump
coordinates. Jump blind into those and they would never come back
again . . . anywhere known. She livened another board,
bringing up jump-graphs. Urtur. That was the way they had come in,
two jumps and loaded -- a very large system where mahendo'sat did a
little mining, a little manufacture, and licensed others. They might
make that distance in one jump now; kif were not following . . . yet.
Did not have to follow. They could figure possible destinations by
dumped mass and the logic of the situation. O my brother, she
thought, wondering how she would face Kohan. He would be affected by
this disgrace, this outrage of lost cargo, of flight while a hani
ship perished stationbound and helpless. Kohan Chanur might be broken
by it; it might tempt young males to challenge him. And if there were
enough challenges, and often enough. . . . No. Not that kind of end
for Chanur. There was no going home with that kind of news. Not until
kif paid, until The Pride got things to rights again. "Mark fifteen to jump
point," Haral said. "Captain, they'll trace us, no
question." "No question,"
she said. Beyond Haral's scarred face she caught sight of Hilfy's,
unmarred and scant-bearded -- frightened and trying not to show it.
Pyanfar opened allship: "Rig for jump." The alarm started, a slow
wailing through the ship. The Pride leapt forward by her generation
pulses, borrowed velocity at the interface, several wrenching
flickers, whipped into the between. Pyanfar dug her claws in, decades
accustomed to this, did that mental wrench which told lies to the
inner ears, and kept her balance. Come on, she willed the ship, as if
intent alone could take it that critical distance farther.
III The Pride came in,
sluggish, nightmare arrival, pulsed out and in again, a flickering of
jump-distorted instruments which showed them far out on the Urtur
range, not close enough to pick up more than an indication of a
stellar mass. Near miss. They had
stretched it as far as it could be stretched. Pyanfar struggled to
move in her cushion, fighting to aim the fingers of her hand, to shut
down all scan, running lights, the weak locational and ID
transmission, every emission from the ship, forgetting nothing in the
mental confusion which went with emergence. Then she started the
sequence to bleed off their velocity, an uncomfortable ride, even as
nightmare-slow as they were moving on their emergence. She kept her
mind focused, trying not to let her thoughts stray to the horror at
the back of it, how fine they had cut it. Hilfy threw up, not an
uncommon reaction to the shift. It did not help Pyanfar's own
stomach. "We're dumping down
to systemic drift velocity," Pyanfar said on allship. "Possibly
the kif stayed to sort through what we jettisoned, but they'll be
here in short order. Or they're already here . . . with likely more
kif here to help them. I'll be very surprised otherwise. We've shut
down all transmission, all scan output. No use of the main engines
either. Everyone still all right down there?" There was prolonged delay
in response. "Looks to be," Tirun's voice came back from
lowerdeck op, which had lost most of what it was primarily designed
to monitor when the holds blew. "Chur and Geran are starting a
check by remote, but it looks like it was a clean separation when we
blew it out. All working systems are clean." The velocity dump went on.
Hilfy moved about, cleaning up in shame. Haral stayed her post.
Pyanfar occupied herself with feverish calculations and sorted and
calculated on that one arrival image they had gotten before scan shut
down, and on what they had on passive recept. She did a delicate
attitude adjustment, trimmed up relative to the flow they were trying
to enter, to present the least surface and the least delicate portion
of them to hazard -- put The Pride into synch with the general
rotation of the system, one with the debris and the rock and gas
which made Urtur, spread out over the orbits of ten planets and
fifty-seven major moons and uncounted planetoids and smaller hazards,
one of the more difficult systems for the rapid passage of any ship
into its central plane. The Pride was picking up decayed signal from
a mahendo'sat installation farther in ... at least that station
should be the origin of it, chatter meaningless not only in the
distance but in elapsed time since its sending. Some might be scatter
from ships operating in the system, traders, countless miners in
ships of all sizes from the great orecarriers down to singleseat
skimmers. In due course they themselves ought to announce presence
and identity, but she had no intention of doing so. There was an
excellent chance that their arrival had been far beyond the capacity
of the longest scan from outsystem relay, and she saw no profit in
bringing the mahendo'sat of Urtur in on a private quarrel with the
kif. The kif could have arrived days ago, bypassing them in the
between, which could happen with a more powerful ship -- system
chatter might reveal that. She kept listening to it with one ear,
finished up the dump, pulling them finally into trim, counting to
herself and hoping her position was what she thought it was. The Pride drifted then,
still maintaining rotation for g, but nothing else of movement. She
kept counting. Debris suddenly rang off the unshielded hull, distant
battering, a few crashes and squeals of larger objects. Target dead
on: she had it, a mob of rocks a little off their velocity, cold mass
swarming about them, a screen between them and the kif s possible
arrival. She feathered directional jets and trimmed up again. The
battering diminished to an occasional patter of dust. Hilfy, standing
by the com console counter, looked about her as if she could expect
to see the impacts with all their sensor eyes dark; met Pyanfar's
face and looked then at Haral, who grimly sat her post and kept
trying to plot their position; and Hilfy composed her own face,
managed not to flinch when another rock shrilled down the
forward-thrusting bow. Pyanfar heaved her aching
body out of the cushion, staggered in walking around the dividing
console to put her hand on the back of Haral's cushion. "Put the
pagers in link," she told Haral. "Keep it channel one and
see that someone's always on it. Tie into lowerdeck op: they'll be
working down there a while yet. The kif will show, never doubt it. So
we lie still, rest up. We receive signal; we don't send; we don't
maneuver. We don't do anything now but drift." "Aye." Haral
started making the links, shunting over some of com function, an
operation which Hilfy should have done. Her broad, scarred face was
without disturbance at this insanity. Haral knew the game; they had
done it a time or two, this prolonged dark silence, waiting out a kif
or an unknown -- but not in Urtur's debris-cluttered field, not
where other ships were likely and collision was possible. Haral knew.
It was Hilfy for whom she offered instructions. Pyanfar took her own pager
from the wall by the exit and went back to give one to Hilfy, who was
leaning against the counter, nostrils slitted and ears laid back.
Pyanfar clapped her on the shoulder and thrust the pager into her
hand. "Out. Go. Everything's about to go under automatic here,
and there's nothing you can do." She passed by Hilfy and headed
out her own way down the corridor outside, with a foul headache, a
worry in her gut, and an obsessive desire for a bath.
Her quarters, left
unsecured, were not as bad as they might have been. The spring covers
had held on the round bed, and the only casualty was a pile of charts
now randomized. She gritted her teeth against the throbbing in her
skull and picked them up, straightened the edges and slapped the
unsorted pile back onto the desk, then stripped off her bloody
clothes, brushed dried blood from her fur and a cloud of shed fur,
too. She always shed in jump . . . sheer fright. Her muscles were
tight. She flexed her cramped shoulders and an arm strained from
fighting g, a stitch all the way into her rib muscles; and she picked
up the pager again and took it with her into the bath, listening to
it, which had nothing but static -- set it on the bathroom counter
before getting into the shower cabinet. The shower was pure
delight, warm and soothing. She lifted her face to it, lowered ears,
shut nostrils and squinched her eyes shut, letting the stream from
the jet comb her mane and beard into order, stepped back and wiped
her eyes clear, turned her back and let the spray massage the pain
out of her tired shoulders. The pager went off,
emergency beep. She spat a curse and flung the shower door open,
skidded on the floor and ran out of the bath and out of her quarters
naked and dripping as she was. She met Haral and Hilfy on their
separate ways back and beat them to the central console. A ship was out there all
right, some ways distant, where no ship had been previously -- an
arrival out of jump. Pyanfar leaned over the board, wiped a bit of
water off the screen and wiped it down her chest, holding her beard
and trying to avoid dripping. The newcomer was closer to Urtur than
they, a good distance inward and zenith -- had actually arrived a
while ago: passive recept picked it up from its inherent noise. "Better part of an
hour backtime," Haral calculated. "I can fine it down." 'Do that." They watched it a while,
while Pyanfar dripped a cold puddle on the decking and the counter.
"Going inward," she pronounced finally on the figures Hilfy
passed her, checked against current reception. "If that's the
kif, they overjumped us and now they've got a bit of hunting to do.
We have a wave just getting to them, but it's got nothing for them,
nothing they're going to know from all the rest of the junk out here.
Good." She recalled her condition and straightened from bending
over the board. "Mop that," she said to Hilfy, who was
juniormost. She strode off, pricklish in her dignity.
"Captain,"
Haral's voice came over the pager, and Pyanfar crossed the cabin in
two strides to reach the com by her bedside . . . punched it with a
forefinger, comb clenched in the same hand. "Receiving you." "Got some chatter
that doesn't sound good," Haral said. "I think there are
kif here, all right. What came into the system a while ago isn't
certain, but it could be mahendo'sat; and I'm getting kif voices and
kif signal out of system center. "Doesn't surprise me.
Pity the mahe who dropped into this pond, if that's what's happened.
But it might cover any noise we made in entry, if that's what it is." "Might do,"
Haral said. "Gods, captain, no telling how many kif there may
have been at Urtur to start with. They're going to swarm all over the
mahendo'sat." "Gods know how much
kif trouble they've already had here. That bunch from Meetpoint could
have gotten as much as five, six days' jump on us. Forget it. Let it
rest. Our business is our own business." "Aye," Haral
said reluctantly. "Shut it down, Haral.
Until they come after us, we're snug." "Aye, captain." The contact broke off.
Pyanfar drew a long breath and let it go, stood in front of the unit
and after a moment punched in the image they could get, from the
telescope in the observation dome. Urtur was a glorious sight ... at
a distance, a saucer of milky light. A shadow passed the image, a bit
of rock, doubtless, part of the swarm with which they traveled. She
shut it down again. They rolled along blind, getting a tap on the
hull now and again from debris, muted this far into The Pride's core,
as they played their part as a mote in Urtur's vast lens. This
silence was an old trick. It worked . . . sometimes. She continued her combing,
and finally, pelt dried, mane and beard combed and silky again in
their ringlets, changed to her third-best trousers, of black silk,
with green and gold cuffing and belt, a round-the-hips dangle of real
gold chains. She changed her pearl earring for an emerald, inspected
her claws and trimmed a roughness. A tip had broken. Hard-skinned,
the kif. But she had got him, that bastard on the dock. That was at
least some consolation for the lost cargo and Tirun's misery. For
hani lives -- that was yet to collect. She strolled out again,
into controls, where Hilfy was standing lone watch. They had far more
room when they were under rotation, with the ship's g making the
crew's private quarters and a great deal of storage accessible, as
well as that large forward ell of the control area itself which was
out of reach during dock. Some of the crew ought to be offshift now,
eating, sleeping: they arranged such details among themselves when
things were tight, knowing best when they needed rest and balancing
the ship's needs against their own. Hilfy had a bruised look when she
turned to face Pyanfar as she came up behind her in the semishadow of
the bridge, amid dead screens and virtually lightless panels. She
stood there as if there was something she could hope to do, ears
pricked up and eyes wide-irised with her general distress. "Haral left you on
watch, imp?" "Haral said she was
going below." "I thought I
dismissed you." "I thought it
wouldn't hurt to be here. I can't rest." "Can't rest is a
cheat on the ship. Can't rest is something you learn to remedy, imp.
It's going to be too long a wait to wear ourselves to rags up here.
Nothing we can do." "Com keeps coming in.
It's them -- it's the same kif. They're asking the mahendo'sat ships
where we are and they're making threats. They call us thieves." Pyanfar spat dryly and
chuckled. "What tender honor. What are the mahendo'sat doing
about it?" "Nothing. It is a
mahendo'sat station, after all; there are other ships ... all over
the place -- there's help for them, isn't there? I'd think they'd do
something, not just let the kif do what they please." "There may be a lot
of kif, too." Pyanfar leaned forward and checked the boards
herself, the little data the computer got off passive recept. A rock
hit them, a slow scream down the metal; a screen flickered to static
and corrected itself, an impact on one of the antennae. "I won't
tell you, imp, just how close we came to losing our referents in that
jump. If that kif ship did get here ahead of us, it's considerably
more powerful than we are. All power and precious little cargo room.
That tell you anything?" "It's not a
freighter." "Kif runner. Got a
few false tanks strapped on, all shell and no mass to speak of,
masking what she is. You understand? Ships like that do the kill; the
carrioneaters come after, real freighters, that suck up the cargoes
and do the dockside trading when they do get to some port. That's
what we're likely up against. A runner. A hunter ship. They
overestimated our capacity . . . overjumped us, more than likely, and
incoming traffic may have been good enough to confuse the issue
further. If that's the case we've just used up all the luck we're
entitled to." "Are we just going to
sit here?" Hilfy asked. "Ship after ship is going to come
into this system not knowing what they're running into ... all those
ships from Meetpoint that don't go the stsho route -- " "Imp, we're blind at
the moment. We've dumped velocity . . . and maybe some of those
hunting us haven't; and maybe some are yet to come. You know what
kind of situation that puts us in. Sitting target." "If they all stay to
centerward," Hilfy suggested cautiously, "we could just
jump out again ... be gone before they could catch us, take the
pressure off these mahe before someone else gets hurt. Maybe we could
get away with it again at the next jumppoint, get to Kirdu . . .
after Urtur, couldn't we maybe make Kirdu in two jumps? Get out of
here. After this place, there are other choices. Aren't there?" Pyanfar stared at her.
"Been doing some research, have you?" "I looked." "Huh." It was a
sensible idea, and one she had had even before the jump; but there
were loose pieces in this business. Moves not yet calculated. It
remained to measure how upset the kif were. And why. "Possible."
She jabbed a finger at Hilfy. "First we take account of
ourselves. We go down, shall we, and see what we have left of cargo." "I thought we dumped
it all." "Oh, not what the kif
want, not that, niece." She leaned over the console, checked the
pager link. "I think we can leave it a while. Come along. It's
all being recorded, all the com and scan up here. We'll check it.
Can't live up here." She set her hand on Hilfy's shoulder. "We
go ask some questions, that's what."
Their uninvited passenger
had settled after jump -- cocooned in blankets and sedated for the
trip, now let go again, to huddle in that heap of blankets in the
corner of the washroom. It had curled up in a knot and thrown one of
the blankets over its head, showing nothing but the motions of its
breathing to prove it was under there. "The ankle restraint
is back on it," Chur said as they watched it from the doorway.
"It's been docile all along ... but let me call Geran and we'll
be sure of it." Chur was smallest of the crew, smaller than
Geran her sister, who was herself of no great stature -- with a thin
beard and mane and a yellowish tint to her fur: delicate, one might
say, who did not know Chur. "There are three of
us," Pyanfar said, "already. Let's see how it reacts."
She walked into the washroom and came near that heap of breathing
blankets. Coughed. There was movement in the blankets, the lifting of
a corner, a furtive look of a pale eye from beneath them. Pyanfar
beckoned. It stopped moving. "It quite well
understands me," she said. "I think, Chur, you're going to
have to get Geran. We may have to fetch it out and I don't want to
hurt it." Chur left. Hilfy remained.
The blankets stirred again, and the creature made a faltering effort
to get its back into the angle of the corner made by the shower stall
and the laundry. "It's just too weak,"
Hilfy said. "Aunt, it's just too weak to fight." "I'll stand here,"
Pyanfar proposed. "There's a mahendo'sat symbol translator and
some manuals and modules -- Haral said she put it in the lowerdeck
op; I want the elementary book. Here. Gods forbid someone put it into
cargo." Hilfy hesitated, cast a
look at the Outsider, then scurried off in haste. "So," Pyanfar
said. She dropped to her haunches as she had before, put out a
forefinger and traced numbers from one to eight on the flooring.
Looked up from time to time and looked at the creature, who watched
her. It reached out of its nest of blankets and made tentative
movements of writing on the floor, drew back the arm and watched what
she was doing until she stopped at sixteen. It tucked the blankets
more closely about itself and stared, from bleak, blue eyes. Washed,
it looked better. The mane and beard were even beautiful, silken,
pollen-gold. But the naked arm outthrust from the blankets bore ugly
bruises of fingered grips. There had been a lot of bruises under the
dirt, she reckoned. It had a reason for its attitude. It was not
docile now, just weak. It had drawn another line, staked out its
corner. The blue eyes held a peculiar expression, analysis, perhaps,
some thought proceeding at length. She stood up, hearing Chur
and Geran coming, their voices in the corridor -- turned and motioned
them to wait a moment when they arrived. She watched the Outsider's
pale eyes take account of the reinforcements. And Hilfy came back
with the manual. "It was in the -- " Hilfy broke off, in
the general stillness of the place. "Give it here,"
Pyanfar said, holding out her hand without looking away from the
Outsider. Hilfy gave it. Pyanfar
opened the book, turned the pages toward the Outsider, whose eyes
flickered with bewilderment. She bent, discarding her dignity a
moment in the seriousness of the matter, and pushed the manual across
the tiles to the area the creature could reach. It ignored the open
book. Another ploy failed. Pyanfar sat still a moment, arms on her
knees, then stood up and brushed her silk breeches into order. "I
trust the symbol translator made it intact." "It's fine,"
Hilfy said. "So let's try that.
Can you set it up?" "I learned on one." "Do it," Pyanfar
said; and motioned to Geran and Chur. "Get it on its feet. Be
gentle with it." Hilfy hurried off. Geran
and Chur moved in carefully and Pyanfar stepped out of the way,
thinking it might turn violent, but it did not. It stood up docilely
as they patted it and assisted it to its feet. It was naked, and he
was a reasonable guess, Pyanfar concluded, watching it make a snatch
after the blankets about its feet, while Chur carefully unlocked the
chain they had padded about its ankle, Geran holding onto its right
arm. Pyanfar frowned, disturbed to be having a male on the ship, with
all the thoughts that stirred up. Chur and Geran were being
uncommonly courteous with it, and that was already a hazard. "Look sharp,"
Pyanfar said. "Take it to the op room and mind what you're
doing." She stooped and gathered up the symbol book herself as
they led it out toward the door. The Outsider balked of a
sudden in the doorway, and Chur and Geran patted its hairless
shoulders and let it think about it a long moment, which seemed the
right tack to take. It stood a very long moment, looked either way
down the corridor, seemed frozen, but then at a new urging -- "Come
on," Geran said in the softest possible voice and tugged very
slightly -- the Outsider decided to cooperate and let itself be led
into the hall and on toward operations. Pyanfar followed with the
book under her arm, scowling for the cost the Outsider had already
been to them, and with the despondent feeling that she might yet be
wrong in every assumption she had made. They had paid far too much
for that. And then what? Give it
back to the kif after all, and shrug and pretend it had been nothing?
The Outsider balked more
than once in being moved, looked about it at such intervals as if
things were moving too fast for it and it had to get its bearings.
Chur and Geran let it stop when it would, never hurrying it, then
coaxed it gently. It walked for them -- perhaps, Pyanfar thought
sourly, biding its time, testing their reflexes, memorizing the
corridors, if it had the wit to do so. They brought it into the
op room, in front of all the boards and the glowing lights, and it
balked again, hard-breathing, looking about. Now, Pyanfar thought,
they might have trouble; but no, it let itself be moved again and let
itself be put into one of the cushions at the dead cargo-monitor
console, near the counter where Hilfy worked over the translator,
running a series of figures over the screen. The Outsider slumped
when seated, dazed-looking and sweating profusely, tucked in its
blanket which it clutched about itself. Pyanfar walked up to the arm
of the cushion; its head came up instantly at her presence and the
wariness came back into its eyes. More than wariness. Fear. It
remembered who had hurt it. It knew them as individuals, past a
clothing change. That at least. "Hai," Pyanfar
said in her best friend-to-outsiders manner, patted its hairless,
sweating shoulder, swept Hilfy aside in her approach to the
translator, a cheap, replaceable stickered keyboard unit linked by
cable into one of their none so cheap scanners. She pushed wipe,
clearing Hilfy's figures, then the Bipedal Sentient button, with a
stick figure of a long-limbed being spread-eagled on it. The same
figure appeared on the screen. She pushed the next which showed a
hani in photographic image, and indicated herself. It understood. Its eyes
were bright with anxiety. It clutched its blanket tighter and made a
faltering attempt to get its feet back on the floor and to stand,
reaching toward the machine. "Let it loose," Pyanfar said,
and Chur helped it up. It ignored them all, leaned on the counter and
poised a trembling hand over the keyboard. The whole arm shook. It
punched a button. Ship. It looked up, its
eyes seeking understanding. Pyanfar carefully took its
alien hand, oh, so carefully, but it allowed the touch. She extended
its forefinger and guided it to the wipe button, back to the ship
button again. It freed its hand and searched, the hand shaking
violently as it passed above the keys. Figure Running, it keyed.
Ship. Figure Running. Ship again. Hani. Wipe. It looked about at her. "Yes," she said,
recognizing the statement. Motioned for it to do more. It turned again, made
another search of the keys. Figure Supine, it stated. It found the
pictorial for kif. That long-snouted gray face lit the screen beside
the Figure Supine. "Kif," Pyanfar
said. It understood. That was
very clear. "Kif," it echoed. It had a voice full of
vibrant sounds, like purring. It was strange to hear it articulate a
familiar word . . . hard to pick that word out when the tongue
managed neither the kif click nor the hani cough. And the look in its
eyes now was more than apprehensive. Wild. Pyanfar put her claws out
and demonstratively rested her hand over the image. Pushed wipe. She
put the hani symbol back on, punched in voice-record; hani, the audio
proclaimed, in hani mode. She picked Up the cheap mike and spoke for
the machine's study-tape, with the machine recording her voice.
"Hani." She called up another image. "Stand." A
third. "Walk." It took a little
repetition, but the Outsider began to involve itself in the process
and not in its trembling hysteria over the kif image. It started with
the first button . . . worked at the system, despite its physical
weakness, recorded its own identification for all the simple symbols
on the first row, soberly, with no joy in its discovery, but not
sluggishly either. It began to go faster and faster, jabbed keys,
spoke, one after the other, madly rapid, as if it were proving
something. There were seventy-six keys on that unit and it ran
through the lot, although toward the end its hand was hardly
controllable. Then it stopped and turned
that same sullen look on them and reached for the seat it had left.
It barely made it, sank down in the cushion and wrapped its blanket
up about its shoulders, pale and sweating. "It's gone its
limit," Pyanfar said. "Get it some water." Chur brought it from the
dispenser. The Outsider accepted it one-handed, sniffed the paper
cup, then drained it. It gave the empty cup back, pointed at itself,
at the machine on the counter, looked at Pyanfar, correctly assessing
who was in charge. It wanted, Pyanfar read the gestures, to continue. "Hilfy," Pyanfar
said, "the manual, on the counter. Give it here." Hilfy handed it over.
Pyanfar searched through the opening pages for the precise symbols of
the module in the machine at present. "How many of those modules
do we have?" "Ten. Two manuals." "That ought to carry
us into abstracts. Good for Haral." She set the opened book into
the Outsider's lap and pointed at the symbols it had just done,
showed it how far the section went. Now it made the connection. It
gathered the book against itself with both arms, intent on keeping
it. "Yes.' Pyanfar said, and nodded confirmation. Maybe nodding
was a gesture they shared; it nodded in return, never looking happy,
but there was less distress in its look. It clutched its book the
tighter. Pyanfar looked at Hilfy,
at Geran and Chur, whose expressions were guarded. They well knew now
what level of sentient they had aboard. How much they guessed of
their difficulties with the kif was another matter: a lot, she
reckoned -- they picked up things out of the air, assembled them
themselves without having to ask. "A passenger compartment,"
she said. "I think it might like clothes. Food and drink. Its
book. Clean bedding and a bed to sleep in. Civilized facilities. That
doesn't mean you shouldn't be careful with it. Let's move it, shall
we, and let it rest." It looked from Chur to
Geran as the two closed in, grew distressed when Chur took its arm to
get it on its feet. It pointed back at the machine . . . wanted that,
its chance to communicate. Perhaps there was more it planned to say,
in the symbols. Surely it expected to go back to the washroom corner.
Pyanfar reached and touched its shoulder from the other side, touched
the book it held and pressed its hand the tighter against it,
indicating it should keep the book, the best promise she could think
of that might tell it they were not done with talking. It calmed
itself, at least, let itself be drawn to its feet and, once steadied,
led out. Pyanfar looked at the
machine on the counter, walked over and turned it off. Hilfy was
still standing there. "Move the whole rig," Pyanfar said.
"We'll risk the equipment." She unplugged the keyboard
module, which was no burden at all, but awkward. "Bring the
screen." "Aunt," said
Hilfy, "what are we going to do with him?" "That depends on what
the kif had in mind to do with him. But we can hardly ask them, can
we?" She followed after the Outsider and Chur and Geran, down
the side corridor to one of the three rooms they kept for The
Pride's occasional paying passengers, up the curve into the area of
the crew's private quarters. They were nicely appointed cabins. The
one Chur and Geran had selected was in fresh greens with woven grass
for the walls and with the bed and chairs in pale lime complement.
Pyanfar counted the damage possible and winced, but they had suffered
far worse in the cause than torn upholstery. And the Outsider seemed to
recognize a major change in its fortunes. It stood in the center of
the room clutching its book and its blanket and staring about with a
less sullen expression than before . . . seemed rather dazed by it
all, if its narrow features were at all readable. "Better show
it the sanitary facilities first," Pyanfar said. "I hope it
understands." Chur took it by the arm
and drew it into the bath, carefully. Hilfy brought the screen in and
Pyanfar added the module as she set it on the counter and plugged it
into the auxiliary com/ comp receptacle. From the bath there came
briefly the sound of the shower working, then the toilet cycling.
Chur brought the Outsider back into the main room, both looking
embarrassed. Then the Outsider saw the translator hookup sitting on
the counter, and its eyes flickered with interest. Not joy. There was never
that. It said something. Two
distinct words. For a moment it sounded as if it were speaking its
own language. And then it sounded vaguely kif. Pyanfar's ears pricked
up ad she drew in a breath. "Say again," she urged it in
kif, and made an encouraging motion toward her ear, standard dockside
handsign. "Kif. . . companion?" "No." She drew a
deeper breath. "Bastard! You do understand." And again in
kif: "Who are you? What kind are you?" It shook its head, seeming
helpless. Evidently who was not part of its repertoire. Pyanfar
considered the anxious Outsider thoughtfully, reached and set her
hand on Chur's convenient shoulder. "This is Chur," she
said in kif. And in hani: "You do me a great favor, cousin: you
sit with this Outsider on your watch. You keep him going on those
identifications, change modules the minute you've got one fully
identified, the audio track filled. Keep him at it while he will but
don't force him. You know how to work it?" "Yes," Chur
said. "You be careful. No
knowing what it's thinking, what it's been through, and I don't put
deviousness beyond its reach either. I want it communicative; don't
be rough with it, don't frighten it. But don't put yourself in danger
either. -- Geran, you stay outside, do your operations monitor by
pager so long as Chur's inside, hear?" Geran's ears -- the right
one was notched, marring what was otherwise a considerable beauty --
flicked in distress, a winking of gold rings on the left. "Clearly
understood," she said. "Hilfy." Pyanfar
motioned to her niece and started out the door. The Outsider started
toward them, but Chur's outflung arm prevented it and it stopped, not
willing to quarrel. Chur spoke to it quickly, gingerly touched its
bare shoulder. It looked frightened, for the first time outright
frightened. "I think it wants
you, aunt," Hilfy observed. Pyanfar laid her ears
back, abhorring the thought of fending off a grab at her person,
walked out with Hilfy unhurried all the same. She looked back from
the doorway. "Be careful of it," she told Chur and Geran
again. "Ten times it may be gentle and agreeable . . . and go
for your throat on the eleventh." She walked off, the skin
of her shoulders twitching with distaste. Hilfy trailed her, but
Pyanfar jammed her hands into the back of her waistband and took no
notice of her niece until they had gotten to the lift. Hilfy pressed
the button to open the door and they got in. Pressed central; it
brought them up and still without a word Pyanfar walked out into the
bridgeward corridor. "Aunt," Hilfy
said. Pyanfar looked back. "What shall we do
with it?" "I'm sure I don't
know," Pyanfar said tartly. Her ears were still back. She
purposely put on a better face. "Not your fault, niece. This one
is my own making." "I'd take some of the
slack; I'd help, if I knew what to do. With the cargo gone -- " Pyanfar frowned and the
ears went down again. You want to relieve me of worry? she thought.
Then don't do anything stupid. But there was that face, young and
proud and wanting to do well. Most that Hilfy knew how to do on the
ship had gone when cargo blew and scan shut down. "Youngster,
I've gotten into a larger game than I planned, and there's no going
home until we've gotten it straightened out. How we do that is
another question, because the kif know our name. Have you got an idea
you've been sitting on?" "No, aunt -- being
ignorant about too much." Pyanfar nodded. "So
with myself, niece. Let it be a lesson to you. My situation
precisely, when I took the Outsider in, instead of handing it right
back to the kif." "We couldn't have
given him to them." "No,' Pyanfar agreed
heavily. "But it would certainly have been more convenient."
She shook her head. "Go rest whelp, and this time I mean it. You
were sick during jump; you'll be lagging when I do need you. And need
you I will." She walked on, into the bridge, past the archway.
Hilfy did not follow. Pyanfar sat down at her place, among all the
dead instruments, listened to the sometime whisper of larger dust
over the hull, called up all the record which had flowed in while she
was gone, listening to that with one ear and the current comflow with
the other. Bad news. A second arrival
in the system . . . more than one ship. It might be kif, might be
someone else from the disaster at Meetpoint. In either case it was
bad. The ones already here were on the hunt beyond question -- kif
were upset enough to have dumped cargo to get here from Meetpoint: no
other ships had cause to hunt The Pride, or to call them thief. They
were the same kif, beyond doubt, upset enough to have banded together
in a hunt. Bad news all the way. Urtur Station was into the
comflow now . . . bluster, warning the kif of severe penalties and
fines. That was very old chatter, from the beginning of the trouble,
a wavefront just now reaching them. Threats from the kif -- those
were more current. The mahendo'sat ship . . . harassed, made its way
stationward. The kif turned their attention to the new arrivals, to
other things. They would begin to figure soon that the freighters
last arrived had jumped behind The Pride. That The Pride had to have
tricked them and gone elsewhere into stsho territories, or had to be
here . . . doing precisely what they were doing; and very probably a
nervous kif would play the surmise he had already staked his
reputation on. They would start hunting shadows once they reached
that conclusion, having questioned a few frightened mahe. They would
fan out, prowl the system, stop miner ships, ask close questions,
probably commit small piracy at the same time, not to waste an
opportunity. The station could do nothing -- a larger one might, but
not Urtur, which was mostly manufacturing and scarcely defended. No
mahendo'sat ship would be willing to be stopped -- but there was no
hope for them of outrunning that hyped kif ship, no chance at least
which an ordinary mahendo'sat captain was equipped to take. And there was no chance
that one of those ships incoming from Meetpoint would turn out to be
hani, and relieve them all of that weight of guilt. Handur's Voyager
was gone, beyond hope and help. Not even proximity to Meetpoint was
likely to have saved anyone in that attack. The kif were nothing if
not thorough: they practiced bloodfeud themselves, and left no
survivors. Kif -- had somehow missed
killing one another off in their rise off their homeworld and into
space. They had done it, hani had always suspected, in mutual
distrust; in outright hatred. They had contested themselves into
space, and hunted each other through it until they found easier
pickings. Not The Pride, she swore,
and not Pyanfar Chanur. That kif who was in
command out there -- she was certain beyond question that it was
Akukkakk of Hinukku, who had come ahead to stake out Urtur to be
waiting for them -- once that kif knew they had gotten through, he
would be checking all his backtime records, sniffing through
everything hoping to catch some missed trace of The Pride's arrival.
They had left very little of a wavefront ghost to detect; but there
might be something, some small missed flicker. Running -- now -- had its
hazards. As long as some of the kif shuttled the system at relatively
high velocity, those ships could run down on them while they were
trying to build theirs back from virtual dead stop. Their chances of
breaking cover and running depended on the position of the kif ships,
whether they had that critical time they might need to get their
referent and to come up to position to jump. Blind as they had made
themselves, the only way to find out where those ships were was to
try something; and the only way to find out how many there were, was
to keep an ear to the kif chatter and see if they could pick out
individual ships. This Akukkakk would not
likely be so careless. It was certain enough they were not outputting
ID signal, which itself brought protests from the station; no ID
signal and no locational signal from any of them. Only from miners
and legitimate residents -- if those signals were what they ought to
be. So, so, so. They were in a
bottle, and it was too much to hope that the kif would not ultimately
coerce mahendo'sat help in the hunt for them. Station and miners
could be intimidated as the kif put the pressure on. What was more,
hani ships came and went at Urtur, and those ships would be
vulnerable to the kif, unsuspecting of atrocity such as the kif had
committed at Meetpoint. They would come into confrontation with the
kif having no idea of the stakes involved here. The kif might act
against them without warning, to draw The Pride out. Such tactics
were not hani practice; but she had been many years off Anuurn and
among outsiders, and she knew well enough how to think like a kif,
even if the process turned her stomach and bristled the hairs on her
nape. And then what do I do? she
wondered to herself. Do I come out meekly to die? Or let others? Her
crew had no more or less right to life than the crew of any other
hani ship which came straying into the trap. There were their lives
involved. There was Hilfy's. And thereby -- all of Chanur. Next time home, she vowed,
/ get that other gun battery moduled in, whatever it costs. Next time home. She frowned, cut off the
recording, which had come to the point at which she had come in. The
present transmissions were few and terse. Someone should be up here
directly and constantly monitoring the comflow and the rest: Hilfy
was right on that score. But they were not a fighting ship and they
had no personnel to spare for such. Six of them, with ordinary duties
and a prisoner to watch: there was course to plot, there were checks
to be run after their jump under stress, systems they had to be sure
of; and there was the chance that they might have to move, defend
themselves and run at any moment, which meant three crewmembers had
to be mentally and physically fit to take action at any instant,
whatever the hour. The automations which ran The Pride in her normal
workaday business had nothing to do with their situation now, systems
overstressed from a jump the ship was never designed to make,
makeshift security on an alien and possibly lunatic passenger. Gods.
She double-checked the pager operation, which was transmission
activated, advised the crew on watch that she was taking over monitor
for a while, to give them rest from the responsibility. "He's all right,"
Geran reported on the Outsider. "Resting awhile." It was good, she thought,
that someone could. She went finally to the
galley, up the curve; the reason of that large ell in the control
section -- no appetite in particular, but her limbs were weak from
hunger. She heated up a meal from the freezer, forced it down against
her stomach's earnest complaints, and tossed the dish into the
sterilizer. Then she walked back to her private quarters to try to
rest. She fretted too much for
sleep, paced the floor pointlessly, sorted the stack of charts into
order and sat down and plotted and replotted possible alternatives,
which she already guessed, against odds she already knew. At last she
shoved all that work aside and used the console by her bed to link in
on the Outsider's terminal, via main comp and access codes. It was
active again: she heard the Outsider's voice as well as saw the
symbols called up by the translator keys. He was using them one after
the other, and when she keyed in on com as well, she could pick up
Chur's voice in the room, quiet assistance -- sounds which might go
with pantomime. Occasionally there was a pairing of symbols the
machine did not do -- Chur's interference, perhaps, trying to get a
point across. Pyanfar cut off com and the translator reception,
stared at the dead screen. The chatter from Urtur system continued
from the pager at her belt, subdued and depressing in content.
Mahendo'sat ships were being advised by their own station not to run,
to submit to search if singled out by the kif, to hug station if they
were already there and hope for safety. A hani voice objected a
question. Hani! Pyanfar sprang from the
bedside, the walls of her cabin immaterial before her vision of that
station with a hani ship at dock; with kif able to move on it at
will. The hani spoke . . . had spoken long ago, in the timelag.
Whatever would happen . . . had long since taken place. Time as well
as space lay between The Pride and that hani ship and the kif, and
there was nothing she could do, blind, from a dead drift, to help it. "Gods!" she
spat, and hurled the desk chair forward on its track with a crash. It
was a Faha vessel in port; Faha's Starchaser, and that was a house
and a company allied to Chanur. Her brother Kohan's first wife was
Huran Faha. Hilfy's mother, for the gods' sakes! There were bonds,
compacts, agreements of alliance. . . . And Hilfy. The mahendo'sat at Urtur
Station urged the hani ship to keep calm. The mahe had, they avowed,
no intention of becoming involved in a kif quarrel, and they were not
going to let a rash hani involve them. The hani demanded
information; kif hunted a Chanur ship: the Faha had been listening
and fretting under restraint this long, and wanted answers -- knew
this was going out over com, as the station knew what the Faha were
doing, making vocal trouble, making sure information got out into the
dark where Chanur ears might pick it up. O gods, o gods. There was
an ally, doing the best for them that could be done at the moment . .
. and they were both helpless to come at the enemy. Pyanfar pulled the chair
out again, sat down, lost in listening for a while. There was no
further information. They had gotten that spurt on the station's
longrange or on Starchaser's . . . information like a beacon fired
off into outsystem, deliberately. If they had it figured The Pride
was here . . . then so did the kif. There were echoes,
repetitions of the message: com was sorting them out, transmissions
of differing degrees of clarity, and the hair prickled on Pyanfar's
neck, sudden, grateful realization: ships all over the system had
begun relaying that message, letting it off like multiple ripples in
still water, massive defiance of the kif -- and the kif had not
ordered silence ... on this timeline. They could not enforce such a
demand, at the present limits of their aggression at Urtur: but those
limits could change. The information was going out like a multiplied
shout . . . had gone out, long ago, and was still traveling.
She found Hilfy for once
where she was supposed to be, in her own quarters, asleep. She
hesitated when the sleepy voice answered the doorcom hail, no more
than hesitated. "Up," she said into the com. "I've
somewhat to tell you." Hilfy was quick to the
door. It whipped opened and Hilfy hung there, disheveled from bed and
grimacing in the full light of the corridor. She had not paused for
clothes. Pyanfar walked in past
her, waited while Hilfy brightened the interior lighting, and held up
a restraining hand, that the brightening need not be permanent or
full. It was a room Hilfy had made her own, a great deal of Chanur
style in this cabin, more than in her own quarters, mementoes affixed
to the walls, pictures of homeworld's mountains and the broad plains
of the Chanur holdings ... the Holding itself, gold stone, shaded
with vines. Pyanfar looked about her, and looked at Hilfy. "Briefly,"
Pyanfar said, "I have to tell you a thing; and there's nothing
can be done about it, I'll tell you that first. We've picked up
signal from a Faha ship docked at station. They're in the middle of
the kif, and they fired a message off for station that I think they
meant we should hear: noisy chatter. I think they know we're out here
and in what kind of trouble. But there's the kif between us, and
there's no way we can do much for each other. You understand?" Hilfy's eyes had stopped
flinching at the light. She stared, amber-rimed about the black, and
her ears flattened and pricked up again with effort. For a young
woman and roused naked out of sleep, she acquired a quiet dignity in
getting her wits collected. "Do you know which ship, aunt?" "Starchaser. That's
Lihan Faha in command." Hilfy nodded. The ears
flinched, ringless. Her face stayed composed. "They'll be in
danger. Like Voyager. And they won't know it. No one would expect
that kind of attack." "Lihan's no tyro,
imp, believe it. We don't play their hand; they don't interfere in
ours. Can't. Nothing we can do out here." "We could throw them
a warning and run." "I don't take that as
an option at the moment. We send it from distance and the kif will
have it before Starchaser has a chance. And public defiance,
involving Starchaser in our leaving -- the kif would be obliged to
react. Revenge is part of their mindset. You have to calculate that
into it. No. Starchaser's riding her own luck. I don't plan to push
it for her. So go back to bed, hear?" Hilfy stood a moment
without moving. Nodded after a moment, her dignity still about her. "Good," Pyanfar
said tightly, and walked out. She heard the door close after her, and
walked the upcurving corridor which led from Hilfy's quarters to her
own, across the main topside corridor and down a short distance. So she might have cost
Hilfy her sound sleep, and the meal she had eaten lay like lead at
her own stomach; but Faha involvement in the hazard was not something
for Hilfy to find out later, like a child, spared adult
unpleasantnesses. Hilfy's face stayed before her; the pager unit at
her hip kept up its static babble, dying echoes of the message,
occasional-spurts of closer transmission, but rarer and rarer. A
stsho ship had come into the system. The kif disdained to harass it;
it begged instructions of Urtur Station, anxious to scud in before
the storm. A lot of mahe in the
system might have the same idea, miners who had already reckoned it
time to head for port, getting themselves out of the way of the kif s
hunt. It was a vast system out
there. Most of the ships in it were incapable of jump, insystem
operators only. So far, everyone was keeping remarkably calm, even
the hani at the eye of that storm. Gods grant a great many
ships pulled inward . . . and afforded the kif a harder target if
they wanted to raid Station in search of one hani ship. That was one
hope. Lihan Faha of Starchaser was too old, too wary to rush out to
mismatched battle. Lihan would not expect stupidity of The Pride. The
Faha would expect them to fend for themselves and above all not touch
anything off prematurely. The Faha needed time: there was a chance
that they could offload cargo and strip that ship down for speed,
given time, shed mass without the need to lose a cargo. They would
not expect help more than that. That was logic speaking. But it hurt.
IV She sat and listened a
time in her cabin, finally contacted Geran belowdecks and turned over
the monitoring to her. "Faha," was Geran's only comment. "Hilfy knows,"
Pyanfar said. "So," Geran
murmured. And then: "I'm on. I've got it."
Pyanfar signed off and
sighed heavily, sitting on the edge of her bed, arms on her knees --
finally took a mild sedative and undressed and curled up in the
bowlshaped bed for a precious while of oblivion, trying not to think
of emergencies and contingencies and the horde of kif prowling about
the system. That did not work, but the
sedative did. She went under like a stone into a pond and came out
again startled by the alarm -- but it was only the timer going off,
and she lay in the bedclothes with her heart slowly stepping back
down to normal. "Any developments?"
she asked lowerdeck op by com from her bedside, not even having
crawled from beneath the sheets, but thrusting an arm out to push the
bottom on the console. "Anything happened while I was off?" "No, captain."
Haral's voice answered her. A shift change had occurred in her off
time. "The situation seems to be temporary stalemate. Station is
broadcasting only operational chatter now. We aren't getting much
from the kif. Nothing alarming. We'd have waked you if there was
news." So their orders ran.
Interpretations of emergency varied; but Haral was the wisest head in
the crew, the canniest. Pyanfar lay there staring at the ceiling a
moment and finally decided she might take her time. There was nowhere
to rush. The rib muscles she had strained in g force had stiffened.
"What about systems check? Has anyone had time to get to that?" "We're still running
the board, captain, but it looks good all the way. The blowout was
absolutely clean and the recalibration was right almost to the hair." "Better luck than we
deserve. What's the Outsider up to?" "Back at work at the
keyboard. Chur and Geran are off now, and Tirun's on, but I didn't
feel, by your leave, captain, that Tirun belonged in there with him
in her condition, and I've had all I can do with visual checks on the
separation readouts -- again by your leave." "You were right." "He's slept a bit. He
hasn't made any trouble . . . gods, he worked till he nearly dropped
over, Chur said; and he's back at it again this shift, shaky as he
is. We fed him right away when he woke up, and he ate it all and went
back to his drills, polite as you please. I've got his roomcom and
his comp monitored from the op station, so we've at least got an ear
toward him." "Huh." Pyanfar
ran a hand through her mane and scowled up at the brightening room
light. The alarm had started the day cycle in the room. "Let the
Outsider work; if it falls over, then let it rest. How's Tirun making
it?" "Limping, sore, and
working with the leg propped up. She's still white around the nose." "I'm all right,"
Tirun's voice cut in, usurping the same mike. "You go off,"
Pyanfar said, "anytime you feel you ought to. We're dead
drifting, and someone else can take up the slack if those first
checks are run. You see to it, Haral. Anything else I should know?" "That's the sum of
it," Haral said. "We're all right so far." "Huh," she said
again, got out of the spring-held sheets and cut the com off, pulled
on her black trousers and put on her belt, her bracelet, and her
several earrings -- shook the ear to settle them and gave her mane
and beard a quick comb into order. Vanity be hanged. She left the
cabin and paid a short visit to the galley, ate a solitary breakfast,
feeling somewhat better. She turned the pager to the monitor channel
in the meanwhile, listened to the chatter which was reaching them and
found it much what Haral had said, a lull in events which in itself
contained worrisome possibilities. By now the kif had surely figured
out what had happened, and by now they would be hunting in stealth --
hence the quiet. The Pride had undergone a great deal of lateral
drift from their entry point, but if she were that kif captain,
trying to reckon the arrival point of a cargoless fugitive on a jump
almost too much for the ship . . . she would calculate a fringe area
jump on a straight string from Meetpoint's mass to that
of Urtur. And that would fine the hunting zone down considerably,
from the vast tracts of Urtur's lenslike system -- to a specific zone
on the fringe, and the direction of systemic drift, and certain
places where a ship seeking cover might move. Time was the other
factor; time defined the segment of space in which they might
logically be drifting, two points-within-which, which then might be
fined down tighter and tighter. Time, time, and time. They were running out of
it. She shut off the pager,
went back to her cabin, spread out the charts of the last effort and
picked up a comp link of her own, started as precise calculations as
she could make on the options they had left. From the hani ship -- she
interrupted herself to query Haral and Tirun on the point -- there
had been nothing during the past watch. No transmission at all.
Starchaser would be feverishly busy at her own business, stripping
down, not provoking anything at this juncture. Waiting. All incoming
transmission indicated that ships of all kinds were moving toward
Urtur Station with all possible haste, a journey of days for some
ships, and of weeks for others of the insystem operators . . . but
even the gesture spoke to the kif, that the mahe would defend Urtur
Station itself, abandoning other points to whatever the kif wished to
do. The incoming jumpships had long since made it in, snugged close:
armed ships, those . . . but one at least was stsho, and its arms
were minor and its will to fight was virtually nonexistent. Again, she reckoned, if
she were that kif in command, those insystem ships would not go in
unchallenged. For all those incoming from the suspect vector where a
hani ship lay hidden, there would be closer scrutiny -- to make sure
a clever hani did not drift in disguised with the rest of the inbound
traffic. ID transmission would be checked, identifications run
through comp; ships might be boarded ... all manner of
unpleasantness. Most of them would pass visual inspection: there was
precious little resemblance between a gut-blown jump freighter with
its huge vanes, and a lumpy miner-processor whose propulsion was all
insystem and hardly enough to move it along with its tow full. Only the miners who might
have had the bad luck to come in from the farthest edge of The
Pride's possible location . . . they might be stopped, have their
records scanned, their comp stripped -- their persons subjected to
gross discomforts until they would volunteer information, if the kif
were true to nature. "Someone's jumped,
captain." Tirun's voice, out of the
com unit. Pyanfar dumped a complex calculation from her mind and
reached for the reply bar, twisting in her chair. "Who? Where?" "Just got the
characteristic ghost, that's all. I don't know. It was farside of
system and long ago. No further data; but it fits within our
timeline. That close." "Give me the image." Tirun passed it onto the
screen. Nadir range and badly muddled pickup: there was too much
debris in the way. "Right," she
said to Tirun. "No knowing." "Out?" Tirun
asked. "Out," Pyanfar
confirmed her, and keyed out the image as well, stared morosely at
the charts and the figures which, no matter how twisted, kept coming
up the same: that there was no way to singlejump beyond Urtur,
however reduced in mass they were now. That jump-ghost which had
just arrived might have been someone successfully running for it.
More ships than that one might have jumped from here, lost in the gas
and debris of Urtur's environs. But quite, quite likely
that ship was kif, a surplus ship moving on to arrange ambush at the
most logical jump point that they might use. Rot Akukkakk. She recalled
the flat black eyes, red-rimmed, the long gray face, the voice very
different from the whining tone of lesser kif. A bitter taste came
into her mouth. How many of them? she
wondered, and pulled the scattered charts toward her on the desk and
again thought like a kif, wondering just where he might station his
ships remaining at Urtur, having figured now, as he must have
figured, what they were up to. That inward flight which
was making the station safer -- was also giving this Akukkakk a free
field in which to operate. There were a finite number of opacities in
the quadrant where the sweep of debris might be concealing The Pride.
A diminishing number of other fugitives to confuse him . . . just
them and him, finally, along with whatever other kif ships he had
called in. Four kif ships had been at
Meetpoint. Some or all might have come with him. There might have
been as many more at Urtur when Hinukku came in. Eight ships, say.
Not beyond possibility. She made her calculations
again, flexed an ache from her shoulders, and pushed back from the
desk, combed her beard with her fingers and flicked her ears for the
soothing sound of the rings. Huh. So. She at least knew
their options -- or the lack of them. It was a thoroughly bad game to
have gotten into. She levered her aching body out of the chair it had
occupied too many hours, stretched again, calculating that they must
be about due for Chur and Geran to come on again. And Hilfy: there
had not been a word out of her. Possibly the imp had been late
getting to sleep after the news which had broken in on her rest. If
she had been sleeping, so much the better. Pyanfar walked out into
the corridor and down it, into the dim zone of the bridge, beyond the
archway, where most of the lights were out and the dead screens made
areas dark which should have been busy with lights. There was one
unexpected bright spot, a counter alight in that ell nook of the
bridge around the main comp bank. Someone had come back and left it
on, she thought, walking up on it to turn it out; and came on Hilfy
there, seated with her attention fixed on the translator, left hand
propping her forehead and her right hand poised over the translator
keyboard. The screen in front of her was alive with mahendo'sat
symbols. Audio brought in a pathetic Outsider-voiced attempt at
speech. Pyanfar frowned, walked closer, and Hilfy saw the movement
and half turned, turned back in haste to close off the audio from the
bridge. Pyanfar leaned on the back of her chair to observe the
strings of symbols on the screen, and Hilfy got up in haste. Go, the Outsider was
trying to say. That was the symbol on the screen at the moment. / go. "I thought you were
supposed to be resting," Pyanfar said. "I got tired of
resting." Pyanfar nodded toward the
screen, where the Figure Walking was displayed. "How's it
doing?" "He." "It, he, how's it
doing?" "Not so good on
pronunciation." "You've been cutting
in on his lessons? Talking to him?" "He doesn't know me
from the machine." Hilfy had her hands locked behind her, ears
flat, wary of reprimands. "You can't work the second manual
without help: it's sentences. He has to have prompts. I've got more
vocabulary filled in with him. We're well into abstracts and I've
been able to figure something about the way his own sentences are
built from what he keeps doing wrong with ours." "Huh. And have you
perchance gotten a name out of him amid these mistakes? His species?
An indication what he comes from? A location?" "No." "Well. I didn't
expect. But well done, all the same. I'll check it out." "Seven hundred
fifty-three words. He ran the whole first manual. Chur demonstrated
changing the keyboard and the cassette and he ran it all, just like
that; and got into the second book, trying to do sentences. But he
can't pronounce, aunt; it just comes out like that." "Mouth shape is
different. Can't say we can ever do much with his language either;
like trying to talk to the tc'a or the knnn . . . maybe even a
different hearing range, certainly not the same equipment to speak
with -- gods, no guaranteeing the same logic, but the latter I think
we may have. Some things he does make half sense." She lowered
herself into the vacated chair, reached and livened a second screen.
"Go talk Tirun out of her work down in op, imp; she's been on
duty and she shouldn't be. I'm going to try to run a translator tape
on your seven hundred fifty-three words." "I did that." "Oh, did you?" "While I was sitting
here." Hilfy untucked her hands from behind her and hastily
reached for the counter, indicated the cassette in the slot of the
translator input. "I pulled the basic pattern and sorted the
words in. Sentence logic too. It's finished." "Does it work?" "I don't know, aunt.
He hasn't given me a sentence in his own language. Just words.
There's no one for him to talk his own to." "Ah, well, so."
Pyanfar was impressed. She ran some of the audio of the tape past,
cut it, looked up at Hilfy, who looked uncommonly proud of herself.
"You're sure of the tape." "The master program
seemed clear. I -- learned the translator principles pretty
thoroughly; father didn't connect that so much with spacing. I got to
start that study from the first; but / knew what I wanted it for.
Like comp. I'm good at that." "Huh. -- Why don't we
try it, then?" Hilfy nodded, more and
more self-pleased. Pyanfar rose and searched through the com board
cabinets, pulled out the box of sanitary wrapped audio plugs and
dropped a handful of those into Hilfy's palm, then located a spare
pager from the same source. She sat down at main com and ran the
double channels of the translator through bands two and three of the
pagers. She took her own plug and inserted it in her ear, tested it
out linked to the Outsider's room com for a moment, and got nothing
back but bursts of white sound, which were mangled hani words that
part of the schizoid translator mind refused to recognize as words.
"We're two, he's three," she said to Hilfy, shutting the
audio down for the moment. "Bring him up here." "Here, aunt?" "You and Haral. This
Outsider who tries to impress us with his seven hundred fifty-three
words ... we find out once for all how his public manners are. Take
no chances, imp. If the translator fails, don't; if he doesn't act
stable, don't. Go." "Yes, aunt."
Hilfy stuffed the audio units and the other pager into her pockets,
hastened out the archway in a paroxysm of importance. "Huh," Pyanfar
said after her, stood staring in that direction. Her ears flicked
nervously, a jangling of rings. The Outsider might do anything. It
had chosen their ship to invade, out of a number of more convenient
choices. It. He. Hilfy and the crew seemed unshakeably convinced of
the he, on analogy to hani structure; but that was still no
guarantee. There were, after all, the stsho. Possibly it made the
creature more tragic in their eyes. Gods. Naked-hided,
blunt-toothed and blunt-fingered. ... It had had little chance in
hand-to-hand argument with a clutch of kif. It should be grateful for
its present situation. No, she concluded. It
should not. Everyone who got hands on it would have plans for this
creature, of one kind and another, and perhaps it sensed that: hence
its perpetually sullen and doleful look. She had her own plans, to be
sure. He, Hilfy insisted at
every opportunity. Her first voyage, a tragic (and safely
unavailable) alien prince. Adolescence. Gods. From the main section of
the com board, outside transmission buzzed, whined, lapsed into a
long convolute series of wails and spine-ruffling pipings. She jumped
in spite of herself, sat down, keyed in the translator on com. Knnn,
the screen informed her, which she already knew. Song. No
recognizable identity. No numerical content. Range: insufficient
input. That kind frequented Urtur
too, miners who worked without lifesupport in the methane hell of the
moon Uroji and found it home. Odd folk in all senses, many-legged
nests of hair, black and hating the light. They came to a station to
dump ores and oddments, and to snatch furtively at whatever trade was
in reach before scuttling back into the darknesses of their ships.
Tc'a might understand them . . . and the chi, who were less rational
... but no one had ever gotten a clear enough translation out of a
tc'a to determine whether the tc'a in turn made any sense of the
knnn. The knnn sang, irrationally, pleased with themselves; or
lovelorn; or speaking a language. No one knew (but possibly the tc'a,
and the tc'a never discussed any topic without wending off into a
thousand other tangents before answering the central questions,
proceeding in their thoughts as snake-fashioned as they did in their
physical movements). No one had gotten the knnn to observe proper
navigation: everyone else dodged them, having no other alternative.
Generally they did give off numerical messages, which the mechanical
translators had the capability to handle -- but they were a code for
specific situations . . . trade, or coming in, a blink code. There
was nothing unusual in knnn presence here, a creature straying where
it would, oblivious to oxygen-breather quarrels. There still came the
occasional ping or clang of dust and rock against The Pride's hull,
the constant rumbling of the rotational core, the whisper of air in
the ducts. The deadness of the instruments depressed her spirits.
Screens stared back in the shadow of the bridge like so many blinded
eyes. And they were out here
drifting with kif and rocks and a knnn who had no idea of the matters
at issue. "Captain," Tirun's voice broke in. "Hearing
you." "Got a knnn out there." "Hearing that too.
What are Hilfy and Haral doing about the Outsider?" "They've gone after
him; I'm picking that up. He's not making any trouble." "Understood. They're
on their way up here. Keep your ear to the outside comflow; going to
be busy up here." "Yes, captain." The link broke off.
Pyanfar dialed the pager to pick up the translator channel, received
the white-sound of hani words. Everything seemed quiet. Eventually
she heard the lift in operation, and heard steps in the corridor
leading to the bridge. He came like an apparition
against the brighter corridor light beyond, tall and angular, with
two hani shapes close behind him. He walked hesitantly into the
dimness of the bridge itself, clear now to the eyes . . . startlingly
pale mane and beard, pale skin mottled with bruises and the raking
streaks of his wound, sealed with gel but angry red. Someone's blue
work breeches, drawstring waisted and loose-kneed, accommodated his
tall stature. He walked with his head a little bowed, under the
bridge's lower overhead -- not that he had to, but that the overhead
might feel a little lower than he was accustomed to -- he stopped,
with Hilfy and Haral behind him on either side. "Come ahead,"
Pyanfar urged him farther, and rose from her place to sit braced
against the comp console, arms folded. The Outsider still had a
sickly look, wobbly on his feet, but she reached back to key the lock
on comp, which could only be coded free again, then looked back again
at the Outsider . . . who was looking not at her, but about him at
the bridge with an expression of longing, of -- what feeling someone
might have who had lately lost the freedom of such places. He came from a ship, then,
she thought. He must have. Hilfy stood behind him.
Haral moved to the other aisle, blocking retreat in that direction
should he conceive some sudden impulse. They had him that way in a
protective triangle, her, Hilfy, Haral; but he leaned unsteadily
against the number-two cushion which was nearest him and showed no
disposition to bolt. He wore the pager at his waist, had gotten the
audio plug into his ear, however uncomfortable it might be for him.
Pyanfar reached up and tightened her own, dialed the pager to
receive, looked back at him from her perch against the counter. "All
right?" she asked him, and his face turned toward her. "You do understand,"
she said. "That translator works both ways. You worked very hard
on it. You knew well enough what you were doing, I'll reckon. So
you've got what you worked to have. You understand us. You can speak
and make us understand you. Do you want to sit down? Please do." He felt after the bend of
the cushion and sank down on the arm of it. "Better,"
Pyanfar said. "What's your name, Outsider?" Lips tautened. No answer. "Listen to me,"
Pyanfar said evenly. "Since you came onto my ship, I've lost my
cargo and hani have died -- killed by the kif. Does that come through
to you? I want to know who you are, where you came from, and why you
ran to my ship when you could have gone to any other ship on the
dock. So you tell me. Who are you? Where do you come from? What do
you have to do with the kif and why my ship, Outsider?" "You're not friends
to the kif." Loud and clear. Pyanfar
drew in a breath, thrust her hands into her waistband before her and
regarded the Outsider with a pursed-lip smile. "So. Well. No,
we've said so; I'm not working for the kif and I'm no friend of
theirs. Negative. Does the word stowaway come through? Illegal
passenger? People who go on ships and don't pay?" He thought that over, as
much of it as did come through, but he had no answer for it. He
breathed in deep breaths as if he were tired . . . jumped as a burst
of knnn transmission came through the open com. He looked anxiously
toward that bank, hands clenched on the cushion back. "Just one of the
neighbors," Pyanfar said. "I want an answer, Outsider. Why
did you come to us and not to another ship?" She had gotten his
attention back. He looked at her with a thoughtful gnawing of a lip,
a movement finally which might be a shrug. "You sit far from the
kif ship. And you laugh." "Laugh?" He made a vague gesture
back toward Hilfy and Haral. "Your crew work outside the ship,
they laugh. They tell me no, go ####no weapons toward me. ### I come
back ###." "Into the rampway,
you mean." Pyanfar frowned. "So. What did you plan to do in
my ship? To steal? To take weapons? Is that what you wanted?" "##### no ####" "Slower. Speak slower
for the translator. What did you want on the ship?" He drew a deep breath,
shut his eyes briefly as if trying to collect words or thoughts.
Opened them again. "I don't ask weapons. I see the rampway . . .
here with hani, small afraid." "Less afraid of us,
were you?" She was hardly flattered. "What's your name?
Name, Outsider." "Tully," he
said. She heard it, like the occasional com sputter, from the other
ear ... a name like the natural flow of his language, which was purrs
and moans combined with stranger sounds. "Tully," she
repeated back; he nodded, evidently recognizing the effort. She
touched her own chest. Pyanfar Chanur is my name. The translator
can't do names for you. Py-an-far. Cha-nur." He tried. Pyanfar was
recognizable ... at least that he purred the rhythm into his own
tongue. "Good enough," she said. She sat more loosely,
linked her hands in her lap. "Civilized. Civilized beings should
deal with names. Tully. -- Are you from a ship, Tully, or did the kif
take you off some world?" He thought about that.
"Ship," he admitted finally. "Did you shoot at
them first? Did you shoot at the kif first, Tully?" "No. No weapons. My
ship have no weapons." "Gods, that's no way
to travel. What should I do with you? Take you back to what world,
Tully?" His hands tightened on the
back of the cushion. He stared at her bleakly past it. "You want
same they want. I don't say." "You come onto my
ship and you won't tell me. Hani are dead because of you, and you
won't tell me." "Dead." "Kif hit a hani ship.
They wanted you, Tully. They wanted you. Don't you think I should ask
questions? This is my ship. You came to it. Don't you think you owe
me some answers?" He said nothing. Meant to
say nothing, that was clear. His lips were clamped. Sweat had broken
out on his face, glistening in the dim light. "Gods rot this
translator," Pyanfar said after a moment. "All right, so
somebody treated you badly too. Is it better on this ship? Do we give
you the right food? Have you enough clothes?" He brushed at the
trousers. Nodded unenthusiastically. "You don't have to
agree. Is there anything you want?" "Want my door #." "What, open?" "Open." "Huh." His shoulders sagged. He
had not expected agreement on that, it was evident. He made a vague
motion of his hand about their surroundings. "Where are we? The
sound. . . ." The dust brushing past the
hull. It had been background noise, a maddening whisper they lived
with. Down in lower-deck, he would have heard a lot of it. "We're
drifting," she said. "Rocks and dust out there." "We sit at a jump
point?" "Star system."
She reached and cut on the telescope in the observation bubble,
bringing the image onto the main screen. The scope tracked to Urtur
itself, the inferno of energy in the center of the dusty lens-shaped
system, a ringed star which flung out tendrils the movement of which
took centuries, ropy filaments dark against the blaze of the center.
The image cast light on the Outsider's face, a moment of wonder:
Urtur deserved that. She saw his face and rose to her feet, moved to
the side of this shaggy-maned Outsider -- a calculated move, because
it was her art, to trade, to know the moment when a guard was down.
"I tell you," she said, catching him by the arm -- and he
shivered, but he made no protest at being drawn to his feet. He
towered above her as she pointed to the center of the image.
"Telescope image, you see. A big system, a horde of planets and
moons -- The dark rings there, that's where the planets sweep the
dust and rocks clear. There's a station in that widest band, orbiting
a gas giant. The system is uninhabited except for mahendo'sat miners
and a few knnn and tc'a who think the place is pleasant. Methane
breathers. But a lot of miners, a lot of people of all kinds are in
danger right now, in there, in that center. Urtur is the name of the
star. And the kif are in there somewhere. They followed us when we
jumped to this place, and now a lot of people are in danger because
of you. Kif are there, you understand?" "Authority." His
skin was cold under her fingerpads, his muscles hard and shivering,
whether from the relative coolness of the bridge's open spaces or
from some other cause. "Authority of this system. Hani?" "Mahendo'sat station.
They don't like the kif much either. No one does, but it's not
possible to get rid of them. Mahendo'sat, kif, hani, tc'a, stsho,
knnn, chi . . . all trade here. We don't all like each other, but we
keep our business to ourselves." He listened, silent, for
whatever he could understand of what she said. Com sputtered again,
the whistles and wailing of the knnn. "Some of them,"
Pyanfar said, "are stranger than you. But you don't know the
names, do you? This whole region of space is strange to you." "Far from my world,"
he said. "Is it?" That got a misgiving look
from him. He pulled away from her hand, looked at her and at the
others. "Wherever it is,"
Pyanfar said in nonchalance. She looked back at Haral and Hilfy. "I
think that's about enough. Our passenger's tired. He can go back to
his quarters." "I want talk you,"
Tully said. He took hold of the cushion nearest, resisting any
attempt to move him. "I want talk." "Do you?"
Pyanfar asked. He reached toward her. She stood still with difficulty
-- but he did not touch. He drew the hand back. "What is it you
want to talk about?" He leaned, standing,
against the cushion with both hands. His pale eyes were intent and
wild, and whatever the precise emotion his face registered, it was
distraught. "You #### me. Work, understand. I stay this ship and
I work same crew. All you want. Where you go. # give me ####." "Ah," she said.
"You're offering to work for your passage." "Work on this ship,
yes." "Huh." She
thrust her hands within her waistband and would have looked down her
nose at him, but it was a matter of looking up. "You make a
deal, do you? You work for me, Outsider? You do what I say? All
right. You rest now. You go back to your cabin and you learn your
words and you think how to tell me what the kif want with you --
because the kif still want this ship, you understand. They want you,
and they'll come after this ship." He thought about that a
moment. Almost he looked as if he might speak. His lips shaped a word
and took it back again, and clamped shut. And something sealed in
behind his eyes when he did that, a bleakness worse than had ever
been there. It sent a prickle down her
spine. This creature is thinking of dying, she thought. It was the
look from against the wall, from the corner in the washroom, but
colder still. "Hai," she said, in her best dockside manner,
and set her hand on his bowed shoulder, roughly but careful with the
claws. Shook at him. "Tully. You aren't strong enough yet to
work. Enough that you rest. You're safe. You understand me? Hani
don't trade with kif." There was a glimmering
then, a sudden break in that seal. He reached out quite unexpectedly
and seized her other hand, his blunt fingers both holding and
exploring it, the furred web he lacked, the pads of the tips.
Pressure hit the center of her hand and the claws came out, only
slightly: she was careful, though her ears flattened in warning. To
her further distress he set his other hand on her shoulder, then let
go both holds and looked about at Haral and Hilfy, then back at her
again. Crazy, she judged him; and then she thought about kif, and
reckoned that he had license for a little strangeness. "I'll
tell you something," she said, "for free. Kif followed you
across the Meetpoint dock to my ship; they followed my ship here to
Urtur, and right now we're sitting here, just trying to be quiet so
the kif don't find us. Trying to decide how best to get out of here.
There's one kif in particular, in command of a ship named Hinukka.
Akukkakk. ..." "Akukkakk," he
echoed, suddenly rigid. The sound came as names must, from the other
ear, his own voice. His eyes were dilated. "Ah. You do know." "He want take me his
ship. Big one. Authority." "Very big. They have a word for
his kind, do you know it? Hakkikt. That means he hunts and others
pick up the scraps he leaves. I lost something at Meetpoint: a hani
ship and my cargo. So did this great hakkikt, this great, this
powerful kif. You escaped him. You ran from him. So it's more than
profit that he wants out of this. He wants you, Tully, to settle
accounts. It's his pride at stake, his reputation. For a kif, that's
life itself. He's not going to give up. Do you know, he I tried to
buy you from me. He offered me gold, a lot of gold. He might even
have kept the deal straight and not delayed for piracy afterward.
He's that desperate." Tully's eyes drifted from her to the
others and back again. You deal with him?" "No. I want something
for dead hani and lost cargo. I want this great hakkikt. You hear me,
Tully?" "Yes," Tully
said suddenly, "/want same." "Aunt," Hilfy
protested in a faint voice. "You want to work,"
Pyanfar said, ignoring her niece's disquiet. "There'll be the
chance for that. But you wait, Tully. You rest. At shift change, I'll
call you again. You come eat with us. Meal, understand? But you get
some rest first, hear? You work on my ship, you take orders first.
Follow instructions. Right?" "Yes," he said. "Go, then. Haral and
Hilfy will take you back down. Go." He nodded, delivered
himself over to Haral and Hilfy together: not a backward look from
either of them as they took him out. Or from him. She watched them
go, found herself rubbing the hand that he had touched. The knnn song wailed out
again. Neighbors to the kif, the knnn. That bore remembering. That
one was uncommonly talkative. No one was ever sure what knnn senses
were, or what motivated their migrations from star to star. She turned to the com
bank, pushed Record, and sent the song again to the translator. It
gave her no more information than the last time. The song ceased, and
there remained only the whisper of the dust. Urtur system everywhere
had grown very still. The translator still
carried white sound, Haral's voice or Hilfy's. The Outsider was
saying nothing in being taken back to his quarters. She was
marginally uneasy about having him out of sight. Perhaps he was mad
after all. Perhaps he would suicide and leave them with nothing to
show for the encounter but a feud with the kif. Up to a point she
could not prevent him killing himself, except by taking measures
which would not encourage his good will. But revenge was something
of purpose, something to make life worthwhile. She had offered him
that. She thought of his face
close at hand, lively, crazed eyes, a hand as cold as something an
hour dead -- a creature, she reminded herself, who had been fighting
alone an enemy which would have turned a stsho to jelly. She grinned somewhat, a
drawing back of the lips and wrinkling of the nose, and stared
thoughtfully toward the telescope image. No disengagement possible.
Not with this kif prince, this hakkikt Akukkakk, whose personal
survival rode on this Outsider business. His own sycophants would
turn on him if he lost face in this matter. He had lost this Outsider
personally . . . likely by some small carelessness, the old kif game
of tormenting victims with promises and threats and shreddings of the
will. An old game . . . one which hani understood; irresistible to a
kif who thrived on fear in his victims. Akukkakk had to make up
that embarrassment at Meet-point. He would have been obliged to
revenge if it were so much as a bauble stolen from him at dockside.
But this Outsider Tully was far more than that. A communicative,
spacefaring species, hitherto unknown, in a position to have come
into kif hands without passing through more civilized regions. The
kif had new neighbors. Possible danger to them. Possible expansion of kif
hunting grounds ... in directions which had nothing to do with hani
and mahendo'sat. Those were high stakes, impossibly high stakes to be
riding on one poor fugitive. Urtur would swarm with
kif, before all was said and done. She delved into the com
storage and started hunting components for a transmitter of some
power, roused out Chur and sent her hunting through the darker areas
of The Pride's circumference for other supplies.
V It was a monster, like
Tully, this thing that they constructed in the spotlit, chill bowels
of The Pride's far rim. It had started out hani-shaped, a patched and
hazardous EVA-pod which they had stripped for parts and never
succeeded in foisting off on another hani ship. Its limbs had just
grown longer, sectioned off and spliced with tubing, and it was
rigged with a wheezing lifesupport system. "Get Tully,"
Pyanfar said applying herself to the last of the welding which should
get the system in order. "Rouse him out." And Chur went,
bedraggled as herself with the dust and the grime of The Pride's
salvage storage. Pyanfar worked, spliced
and cursed when the system blew in another frustrating curl of smoke,
unhitched that component and rummaged for a new one, sealed that in
and congratulated herself when it worked, a vibration and a flicker
of green lights on the belt and inside the helmet. She grinned, wiped
her hands on the blue work breeches she had put on for this grimy
task ... a long time since she had practiced such things, a long time
since she had worn blue roughspun and gotten blisters on her hands.
In her youth, under another of The Pride's captains, she had done
such things, but only Haral and Tirun could recall those days. She
licked a burn on her finger and squatted on the deck, content with
the operation of the unit. Let it run a while, she decided: see if it
would go on working. The suit stared back, stiff and gangling on its
huge feet, reflecting her in distant miniature off its curved
faceplate. It stood like some mahendo'sat demon, two limbs shy of
that description, but ghastly enough in its exposed hoses and its
malproportioned height, against the dark of the surrounding
machine-shop. A reek of blood mingled with the singed smell of the
welding. A bucket on the deck caught the occasional drip from the
skinned carcass which hung beyond it under the light. It was a little more than
hani-sized, chained up to the hoist-track above, long-faced head
adroop on a longish neck, to thaw and drain. It had begun to reek
under the lights. The long limbs were coming untucked, and the belly
gaped. Uruus. Sweet meat and a fat one: the best steaks had already
headed galleyward, in this raid on their private larder. It had
wounds this carcass, but that only lengthened the limbs, letting the
haunches drop. The door unsealed and
sealed in the dark distance; steps whispered along the metal
flooring. Pyanfar adjusted her translator and got nothing, but she
could see the lights go on in the far dark expanse, illusionlike and
high because of the upward curve of the deck in the vast storage
chamber, picking out two figures, one gangling tall and pale. She sat
and waited as the lights turned themselves on and off in sequence
along the walkway, bringing the two nearer and nearer where she sat. Tully and Chur, of course.
The Outsider came willingly enough, but he stopped dead when he came
close, and the light went out on him, leaving him and Chur in the
dark outside the area where Pyanfar sat. She stood up, making him out
clearly enough in the shadow. "Tully, it's safe. Come on. it's
all right, Tully." He did come, slowly, alien
shadow in the rest of the strangeness, and Chur had hold of his arm
in case. He looked at the vacant suit, and at the hanging carcass,
and kept staring at it. "Animal,"
Pyanfar said. "Tully. I want you to see what we're doing. I want
you to understand. Hear?" He turned toward her, eyes
deep in their shadowed sockets, the angled light glancing off a pale
mane and planes of feature decidedly un-hani. "You put me in
this?" "Put that in the
suit," Pyanfar said cheerfully. "Transmitter sending signal
hard as it can. We tell the kif that we're throwing you out and we
give them that, you understand, Outsider. Make them chase that. And
we run." It began to get through to
him. His eyes flickered over the business again, the vacant suit, the
frozen carcass "Their instruments see in it," he said. "Their instruments
will scan it, yes; and that's what they'll get." He gestured toward the
carcass. "This? This?" "Food," she said. "Not
a person, Tully. Animal. Food." Of a sudden his face took
on an alarming grin. His body heaved with a choking sound she
realized finally for laughter. He clapped Chur on the shoulder,
turned that convulsed face toward her with moisture streaming from
his eyes and still with that mahendo'sat grin. "You # the kif." "Put that inside,"
she told him, motioning toward the carcass. "Bring it. You help,
Tully." He did, with Chur, his
rangy body straining against the half-frozen weight, an occasional
grimace of what might be disgust at the look or the feel of it.
Pyanfar shut down the pod's lifesupport, opened up their work of art,
and wrinkled her nose as the Outsider and Chur brought the reeking
carcass over. There was trim work to do. She abandoned fastidiousness
and did it herself, having some notion how it might fit. The head
could be gotten into the helmet, a bit of the neck to stuff the
vacant body cavity of the carcass, and a little scoring and breaking
of the rib cage, a sectioning and straightening of stiff limbs. "Going to smell good
if that drifts a while with the heater on," Chur observed. Tully
laughed his own choking laugh and wiped his face, smearing his
mustache with the muck which coated his arms to the elbow. Pyanfar
grinned, suddenly struck with the incongruity of things, squatting
here in the dark with a crazed alien and a suit full of uruus
carcass, the three of them in insane conspiracy. "Hold it,"
she ordered Chur, trying to get the belly seam fastened. Chur held
the sides together at the bottom and Tully helped at the top, and
there it was, sealed and Tully-shaped. "Come," Pyanfar
said, taking the feet, and Tully and Chur energetically got purchase
on its shoulders, lumbering along with it as the lights recognized
their presence and began to go on and off as they traveled. "Cargo dump?"
Chur asked. "Airlock,"
Pyanfar said. "Should passengers leave a ship by any other
route?" It was no light weight.
They staggered along the walk with the body of the pod dragging at
this and that point, got it onto a cargo carrier at the next section
and breathed sighs of relief as it lay corpsewise on the carrier,
mirrored faceplate staring up at the overhead. Tully was white and
trembling from the exertion: sweat stood on his skin and he held onto
the carrier's endrail, panting, but bright eyed. "You're Pyanfar,
right?" he asked between breaths. "Pyanfar?" "Yes," she
owned, wiped an itch on her nose with a dirty hand, reckoning she
could get no dirtier, nodded at Chur and gave him Chur's name again. "I #," he said,
nodding affirmative. He pushed enthusiastically when they pushed, and
they got the thing moving easily down the aisle through interior
storage, past the hulking shadows of the tanks and the circulating
machinery, out again into the normal lighted sections of belowdecks,
under a lower ceiling, and through ordinary corridors to the lock. "# he go #?"
Tully asked, staggered as he helped them offload the pod, looked
anxiously leftward as the lock's inner hatch opened. "Go quick
out?" "Ah, no,"
Pyanfar said. She carried the feet through and braced them as Chur
and Tully got the upper body through and upright. "There,
against the outer hatch. We blow that, and he'll go right nicely."
She set the feet down and added her weight as they heaved and braced
it, stood back and surveyed her handiwork with a grin and a thought
of the kif. She powered up the lifesupport with a touch of the
buttons on the belt, and it stood a little stiffer, on minimum
maintenance. She shut it down again, not to waste a good cylinder. And for the moment Tully
stood staring at it too, panting and sweating, arms at his sides and
a haggard look suddenly in place of the laughter, an expression which
held something of a shudder, as if after all he had begun to think
about that thing and his situation, and to reckon questions he had
not asked. "Out," Pyanfar
said, motioning Chur from the lock, including Tully with that sweep
of her arm. He hesitated. She moved to take his arm in his seeming
daze, and he suddenly hung his hand on her shoulder, one and then the
other, and bowed his head against her cheek, brief gesture, quickly
dropped, hands withdrawn as swiftly as her ears flattened. She caught
herself short of a hiss, deliberately patted his hairless shoulder
and brought him on through the lock into the corridor. Thank you, that act seemed
to signify. So. It had subtler understandings, this Tully. She
flicked her ears, a look which got a quickly turned shoulder from
Chur, and shoved the Outsider leftward in Chur's direction. "Go
clean up," she said. "Get showered, hear? Wash." Chur took him, indicated
to him that he should help her with the carrier, and they went
trundling it past and down the corridor to put that back where it
belonged. Pyanfar blew a short breath and closed the interior lock,
then headed for the common washroom where she had left her better
clothes -- did a small shudder of the skin where the Outsider's hand
had rested on her shoulder. But it had understood what
they were doing, very well understood what they were up to with the
decoy, and that in fact it was not all a matter of humor. Gods rot the kif. And then she thought of
the uruus' solemn long face, so benignly stupid, and of the deadly
pride of the great hakkikt of the kif, and her nose wrinkled in
laughter which had nothing to do with humor.
Supper was on, a delicious
aroma from the galley topside, Hilfy and Geran having stirred about
for some time in that quarter and in the larger facilities below. It
was a real meal this time, one of the delightsome concoctions Geran
was skilled at, the penultimate contribution of the uruus to their
comfort, prepared with all the care they lavished on food on more
ordinary voyages, when food was an obsession, a precious variance in
routine, an art they practiced to delight their occasional passengers
and to amaze themselves. Now dinner came with as
great a welcome, aromatic courage wafting the airflow from that
corridor, and Pyanfar set her com links to the bridge and did what
wanted doing there to secure the place, at the last with her hands
all but trembling from hunger, and with an aching great hollow in the
middle of her. There had been nothing dire so far, only nuisance
coming over com, no indication of trouble more than they already had;
and the suited uruus waited in the lock, melting and still. . . she
checked the airlock vid ... on its somewhat altered feet against the
outer hatch. She cut that image and checked the galley/commonroom
link again, picked up Hilfy's voice and shunted the flow the other
way, vowed a great curse on any kif who might interrupt such an hour
as they had earned. But the link was there if needed and the unit in
the commonroom would carry any business it had to. She got the word
from Geran and passed it over allship, finally left the bridge and
walked on round to dinner, clean again and full of anticipation. She grinned inside and out
at the sight, the table lengthened so that it hardly gave them room
to edge around it, the center spread with fantastical culinary
artistry, platters of meat, by the gods, no stale freeze-dried chips
and jerky and suchlike; gravies and sauces in which tidbits floated,
garnished with herbs and crackling bits of fat. The sterile white
commonroom was transformed, and Hilfy and Geran hastened about to lay
cushions with bright patterns, Chanur heraldry, red and gold and
blue. "Wondrous,"
Pyanfar pronounced it, inhaling. Places for seven. She heard the lift
and looked toward the corridor. In short order came Haral and Chur
with Tully in tow, and Tirun limped along behind them, using her
pipe-cane. "Sit, sit," Pyanfar bade them and Tully, and
they sorted themselves and edged along as they had to in the narrow
confines, took then-places shoulder to shoulder. Pyanfar held the
endmost seat bridgeward, Haral the endmost galleyward, and Tirun and
Chur sandwiched Tully between them, while Hilfy and Geran took the
other side. It presented a bizarre sight, this whitegold mane between
two ruddy gold ones, hairless shoulders next to redbrown coated ones,
and Tully hunching slightly to try to keep his gangling limbs out of
his seatmates' way . . . Pyanfar chuckled in good humor and made the
health wish, which got the response of the others and startled Tully
by its loudness. Then she poured gfi from her own flask by her cup;
the whole company reached for theirs and did the same, Tully
imitating them belatedly, and for a moment there was nothing but the
clatter of knives and cups and plates as Geran's and Hilfy's
monuments underwent swift demolition. Tully took snatches of this and
that as the dishes rotated past him on the table's rotating center,
small helpings at first, as if he were not sure what he had a right
to, and larger ones as he darted furtive glances at what others took,
and ladled on sauces and laid by small puddles of this and that in
the evident case it might not come round a second time. No questions
from him. "Uruus," Chur
said wickedly, crooking a claw onto his arm to catch his attention,
gestured at the steaks. "Same thing, this, the animal we give
the kif." Tully looked momentarily
uncertain, poked at the steak with his knife and looked up again at
Chur's grin. "Same, this?" "Same," Chur
confirmed. Tully took on an odd look, then started eating, laughed to
himself after a moment in a crazed fashion, shoulders bowed and
attention turned wholly to the food, darting only occasional glances
to their hands, trying to handle the utensils hani-style. "Good?" Pyanfar
broke the general silence. Tully looked up at once, darted looks at
them in general, helpless to know who had spoken. The translator
speaking into his ear had no personality. "I, Pyanfar. All
right, Tully? This food's all right for you?" "Yes," he said.
"I'm hungry." Hungry, the translator said into her ear,
dispassionately; but the look on his face for a moment put a great
deal more into it. The bruises showed starkly clear in the
commonroom's white light; the angularity of bones reached the surface
on his shoulders and about his ribs. "Says he's cold most
of the time," Chur said. "He doesn't have our natural
covering, after all. I tried a jacket on him, but he's too big. He
still wants it, asks to cut it. Maybe better to start with something
of Haral's in the first place." "Still too small for
those arms," Haral judged. "But I'll see what I can find." "Cold," Tully
said, in his limited understanding of the discussion. "We're trying,
Tully," Chur said. "I ask Haral, understand. Maybe find you
something." Tully nodded. "#"
he said forlornly, and then with a bright expression and a gesture at
the meal: "Good. Good." "Not complaining, are
you?" Pyanfar commented. "Don't -- Gods." The com broke in, a
knnn-song, and Tully jumped. Everyone looked up reflexively toward
the speaker, and Pyanfar drew a deep breath when knnn was all it
turned out to be. Tully alone kept staring that way. "That's nothing,"
Pyanfar said. "Knnn again. It'll shut up in a moment." She
looked soberly at the others, now that business was on her mind. "Got
ourselves a course laid, in case. It's in the comp when we need it.
And we will. Got ourselves a decoy rigged too, Chur and Tully and I
-- a gift for the kif that's going to cost them critical speed if
they want to pick it up; got it fixed so it'll look good to their
sensors." There was a moment's
silence. "All right to talk?"
Hilfy asked. Pyanfar nodded without
comment. "Where?" Hilfy
asked. "If we're running -- where? Meet-point again?" "No. I considered
that, to be sure, throwing the kif off by that. But figuring it and
refiguring -- we came close enough not making it when we came in with
all Urtur's mass to fix on; and there's not a prayer of doing it in
reverse with only Meetpoint's little mass to bring us up. I've worked
possible courses over and over again, and there's nothing for it --
twojump, to Kirdu. It's a big station; and there's help possible
there." "The kif," said
Geran, "will have it figured too. They'll intercept us at Kita." "So we string the
jumps," Pyanfar said, taking a sip of gfi. "No other way,
Geran, absolutely no other." "Gods," Chur
muttered undiplomatically. Hilfy's expression was troubled, quick
darts of the eyes toward the others, who were more experienced. Tully
had stopped eating again and looked up too, catching something of the
conversation. "Consecutive jump,"
Pyanfar said to Hilfy. "No delay for recovery time, no velocity
dump in the interval and gods know, a hazard where we're going: we're
bound to boost some of this debris through with us. But the risk is
still better than sitting here while the kif population increases.
There's one jump point we have to make: Kita. Past Kita Point, the
kif have to take three guesses where we went -- Kura, Kirdu, Maing
Tol. They might guess right after all, but they still might disperse
some ships to cover other possibilities." "We're going home,"
Hilfy surmised. "Who said going home?
We're going to sort this out, that's what. We're going to shake a few
of them. Get ourselves a place where we can find some allies. That's
what we're doing." "Then the Faha -- we
could warn them." "What, spill where
we're bound? They'll figure too ... the best hope's Kirdu. They'll
likely go there." "We could warn them.
Here. Give them a chance to get out." "They can take care
of themselves." "After we brought the
trouble here -- " "My decision,"
Pyanfar said. "I'm not saying that;
I'm saying -- " "We can't help them
by springing in their direction. Or how do you plan to get word to
them? We'll make it worse for them, we can only make it worse. You
hear me?" "I hear." The
ears went back, pricked up with a little effort. There was a silence
at table, except for the knnn, who wailed on alone, rapt in whatever
impulse moved knnn to sing. And stopped. "Gods,"
Haral muttered irritably, shot a worried look the length of the
table. Pyanfar returned it, past Hilfy, past the Outsider. "Pyanfar." Tully
spoke, sat holding his cup as if he had forgotten it, something
obviously welling up in him which wanted saying, with a look close to
panic. "I talk?" he asked. And when Pyanfar nodded: "What
move make this ship?" "Going closer to home
territory, to hani space. We're going where kif won't follow us so
easily, and where there's too much hani and mahendo'sat traffic to
make it easy for them to move against us. Better place, you
understand. Safer." He set down the cup, made
a vague gesture of a flat nailed long-fingered hand. "Two jump." "Yes." "#. Need #, captain.
#." He was sorely, urgently
upset. Pyanfar drew in a breath, made a calming gesture. "Again,
Tully. Say again. New way." "Sleep. Need sleep in
jump." "Ah. Like the stsho.
They have to, yes. I understand; you'll have your drugs, then, make
you sleep, never fear." He had started shaking. Of
a sudden moisture broke from his eyes. He bowed his head and wiped at
it, and was quiet for the moment. Everyone was, recognizing a
profound distress. Perhaps he realized: he stirred in the silence and
clumsily picked up his knife and jabbed at a bit of meat in his
plate, carried it to his mouth and chewed, all without looking up. "You need drugs to
sleep," Pyanfar said, "and the kif took you through jump
without them. That's what they did, was it?" He looked up at her. "Were you alone when
you started, Tully? Were there others with you?" "Dead," he said
around the mouthful, and swallowed it with difficulty. "Dead." "You know for sure." "I'm sure." "Did you talk to the
kif? Did you tell them what they asked you?" A shake of his head. "No?" "No," Tully
said, looked down again and up under his pale brows. "We give
wrong # to their translator." "What, the wrong
words?" He still had the knife in
his hand. It stayed there with its next morsel, the food forgotten. "He fouled their
translator," Tirun exclaimed in delight. "Gods!" "And not ours?"
Pyanfar observed. Tully's eyes sought toward
her. "I thought you ran
that board too quickly," Pyanfar said. "Clever Outsider.
We, you said. Then there were more of you in the kif s hands at the
start." "The kif take four of
us. They take us through jump with no medicine, awake, you
understand; they give us no good food, not much water, make us work
this translator keyboard same you have. We know what they want from
us. We make slow work, make we don't understand the keyboard, don't
understand the symbols, work all slow. They stand small time. They
hit us, bad, push us, bad -- make us work this machine, make quick.
We work this machine all wrong, make many wrong words, this word for
that word, long, long tape -- some right, most wrong. One day, two,
three -- all wrong." His face contorted. "They work the
tape and we make mistake more. They understand what we do, they take
one of us, kill her. Hit us all, much. They give us again same work,
make a tape they want. We make number two tape wrong, different
mistake. The kif kill second one my friends. I -- man name Dick James
-- we two on the ship come to station. They make us know this
Akukkakk; he come aboard ship see us. He -- " Again a contortion
of the face, a gesture. "He -- take my friend arm, break it,
break many time two arms, leg -- I make fight him, do no good; he hit
me -- walk outside. And my friend -- he ask -- I kill him, you
understand. I do it; I kill my friend, # kif no more hurt him." The silence about the
table was mortal. Pyanfar cleared her throat. Others' ears were back,
eyes dilated. "They come,"
Tully went on quietly. "Find my friend dead. They # angry, hit
me, bring me out toward this second ship. Outside. Docks. I run. Run
-- long time. I come to your ship." He ducked his head, looked
up again with a wan, mahendo'sat smile. "I make the keyboard
right for you." "That kif wants
killing," Haral said. "Tully," Pyanfar
said. "I understand why you're careful about questions about
where you come from. But I'll lay odds your space is near the kif --
you just listen to me. I think your ship got among kif, and now they
know there's a spacefaring species near their territories, either one
they can take from -- or one they're desperately afraid is a danger
to them. I don't know which you are. But that's what the kif wanted
with you, I'm betting -- to know more about you. And you know that.
And you're reluctant to talk to us either." Tully sat unmoving for a
moment. "My species is human." She caught the word from his
own speech. "Human." "Yes, they try ask
me. I don't say; make don't understand." "Your ship -- had no
weapons. You don't carry them?" No answer, "You didn't know
there was danger?" "Don't know this
space, no. Jump long. Two jump. # we hear transmission." "Kif?" He shook his head, his
manner of no. "I hear -- " He pointed to the com, which
remained silent. "That. Make that sound." "Knnn, for the gods'
sake." He touched his ear. "Say
again. Don't understand." "Knnn. A name. A
species. Methane breather. You were in knnn territory. Worse and
worse news, my friend. Knnn space is between stsho and kif." "Captain," said
Geran, "I'd lay bets with a chi the stsho had a finger in this
too. Their station, after all ... where the kif felt free to move him
about the dock in public ... I daresay the kif didn't get any
questions at all from the stsho." Pyanfar nodded
thoughtfully, recalling the stsho official, the change in that office
or that officer. A smiling welcome, impassive moonstone eyes and
delicate lavender brows. A certain cold went up her back. "Stsho'd
turn a blind eye to anything that looked like trouble, that's sure --
Imp," she said, seeing Hilfy's laidback ears and dilated eyes,
"pay attention: this is the way of our friends and allies out
here. Gods rot them. -- Eat your dinner." Tully stirred his plate
about, turned his attention back to that, and Pyanfar chewed another
bite, thoughtful. Knnn, kif, stsho . . .
gods, the whole pot had been stirred when this Outsider, this human,
dropped into the middle of it. An uncomfortable feeling persisted at
the back of her neck, like a cold wind of belated reason. The whole
dock at Meetpoint, zealously trying not to hear or see anything
amiss, with a fugitive on the loose and the kif on the hunt. . . . There was no particular
evil in the stsho -- except the desire to avoid trouble. That had
always been the way of them. But they were different. No hani read
past the patterns. No hani understood them. And, gods, if the knnn
were stirred up -- along with the kif. ... She swallowed the dry
mouthful and washed it down with a draught of gfi, poured herself
another cupful. Tully ate with what looked like appetite. Food
disappeared all round the table, and the plates rotated for second
helpings. "I'm going to put
Tully on limited assignment," she said. "He can't read,
sure enough. But some things he can do." He had looked up.
"Niece," she said, "you're no longer junior-most on
The Pride, this run. Ought to make you happy." Hilfy's brown study
evaporated into disquiet. "He's junior-most?" "A willing worker,"
Pyanfar said, with a wrinking of her nose. "Your responsibility
in part, now." "Aunt, I -- " "I told you how it
was, niece. Hear? You know what we're dealing with, and what stakes
are involved?" "I hear," Hilfy
said in a faint voice. "No, I don't know. But I'm figuring it
out." "Kif," Geran
spat. "They're different, when the odds go against them." "Once -- " Haral
said, and winced. The knnn song was back again, shriller. "Rot
that." "Close," Pyanfar
judged. It was exceedingly clear reception. She met Haral's eyes
facing her down the length of the table, more and more uneasy. The
song continued for a moment, too loud to talk above it, then wailed
away, gibbering to itself into lower tones. "Too rotted close,"
Haral said. "Captain -- " Pyanfar started to push
herself back from table, surrendering to anxiety. "Chanur Captain,"
com said far more faintly, a clicking voice speaking the hani tongue.
"Chanur Captain -- don't trouble to acknowledge. Only listen.
..." Pyanfar stiffened, looked
toward com with a bristling at her nape and a lowering of her ears.
Everyone was frozen in place. "The bargain you
refused at Meetpoint . . . is no longer available. Now I offer other
terms, equal to the situation. A new bargain. A safe departure from
this system, for yourself and for the Faha ship now at dock. I
guarantee things which properly interest you, in return for one which
doesn't. Jettison the remnant of your cargo, hani thief. You know our
ways. If you do the wise thing, we will not pursue you further. You
know that we are the rightful owners of that merchandise. You know
that we know your name and the names of your allies. We remember
wrongs against us. All kif. . . remember crimes committed against us.
But purge your name, Pyanfar Chanur. More, save lives which were not
originally involved in your act of piracy. Give us only our property,
Pyanfar Chanur, and we will take no further action against the Faha
and yourself. That is my best offer. And you know now by experience
that I mahe no empty threat. Is this matter worth your sure
destruction and that of the Faha? Or if you think to run away again,
deserting your ally, will you hope to run forever? That will not
improve your trade, or mahe you welcome at stations who will learn
the hazard of your company. Give it up, thief. It's small gain
against your loss, this thing you've stolen." "Akukkakk,"
Pyanfar said in a low voice when it had done. "So." "Aunt," Hilfy
said, carefully restrained. "They're going to go after
Starchaser. First." "Undoubtedly they
are." The message began to repeat. Pyanfar thrust herself to her
feet. "Gods rot that thing. Down it." Chur was nearest. She
sprang from her seat and turned down the volume of the wall unit.
Others had started working themselves out of their places, Tully
among them. Sweat had broken out on his skin, a fine, visible dew. "Seal the galley,"
Pyanfar said. "Secure for jump. We're moving." Hilfy turned a last,
pleading look on her. Pyanfar glowered back. And with Geran urging
him to move on, Tully delayed, putting out a hand to touch Pyanfar's
shoulder. "Sleep," Tully pleaded, reminding her, panic
large in his eyes. "For the gods' sake
put him out," Pyanfar snarled, turned and thrust her own plate
and some of the nearer dishes into the disposal, shoved others into
the hands of Haral and Tirun and Chur, who were throwing things in as
fast as they could snatch them. Hilfy started to help. "Out,"
Pyanfar said to Chur. "That business in the
airlock . . . get its lifesupport going. Move it!" Chur scrambled over the
top of the table and ran for the doorway in a scrabbling of claws.
Pyanfar turned with fine economy and stalked out in her wake, toward
controls. Tirun limped after her, but Pyanfar had no disposition to
wait. Anxiety prickled up and down her gut, disturbing the meal she
had just eaten, sudden distrust of all the choices she had made up
till now, including the one that had a slightly crazed Outsider loose
on the ship in a crisis; and knnn near them; and their eyes blinded
and their ears deaf to the outside. . . . She walked into the
darkened bridge, slid into the well worn cushion which knew her
body's dimensions, settled in and belted in, heard the stir of others
about her, Tirun, Hilfy, Haral. The kif voice continued over com.
Elsewhere she heard Tully pleading with Geran over something, trying
to get something through the translator which he could only half say.
She started running perfunctory clear checks, all internal, threw a
look toward her companions. Haral and Tirun were settled and running
personal checks on their posts, rough and solid and intent on
business. Hilfy had her ears back, her hands visibly shaking in
getting her boards ready. So. It was one thing, to ride through kif
fire at Meetpoint . . . quite another to face it after thinking about
it. "Please," a
mahendo'sat voice came through, relayed suddenly from Hilfy's board
to hers. "Stand off from station. We appeal to all sides for
calm. We suggest arbitration. ..." They had thrown that out
on longrange, plea to all the system, to all their unruly guests,
this station full of innocents, where all who could in the system had
taken refuge. And among them,
Starchaser. "That had to antedate
the other message," Pyanfar said morosely. "It's all old
history at station." That for Hilfy, to get her mind straight.
Tully was still talking: she took the translator plug from her ear,
shutting down all communication from that quarter, trusting Geran's
not inconsiderable right arm if all else failed. "Captain." That
was Chur on allship. " Lifesupport's on and the lock's sealed
again." "Understood, Chur,"
she muttered, plying the keyboard and calling up her course
plottings. "Take station in lower-deck op." She would
rather Chur on the bridge; but there was Tully loose; there was a kif
loose, and time running on them -- it was getting late to risk
someone moving about in the corridors. She spun half about,
indecisive. Hilfy, the weak link, sat at com, scan backup. "What's
the kif doing? Any pickup?" "Negative,"
Hilfy said calmly enough. "Repeat of message. I'm getting a
garble out of ships insystem, no sign yet of any disruption. The
knnn. ..." That sound moaned through
main com again, a transmission increasingly clear and distinct.
Closer to them in this maelstrom of dust and debris. Pyanfar sucked
in a breath. "Stand by to transmit, full sensors, all systems; I
want a look out there, cousins." She started throwing switches.
The Pride's nervous system came alive again in flares of color and
light, busy ripplings across the boards as systems recalibrated
themselves. She hit propulsion and reoriented, reached for the main
comp. "Gods," Tirun
muttered, throwing to her number-one screen the scan image which was
coming in, a dusty soup pocked with rocks. "Ship," Haral
said suddenly, number-one scan, and overrode with that sectorized
image. Panic hit Pyanfar's gut. That was close to them, and moving. "Resolution,"
she demanded. The Pride was accelerating, without her shields as yet.
The whisper of dust over the hull became a shriek, a scream: they hit
a rock and it shrilled along the hull; hit another and a screen
erupted with static. "Gods, this muck!" "Shields," Haral
said. "Not yet." "No resolution,"
Tirun said. "Too much debris out there. We're still blind." " "Gods rot it."
She hit the airlock control, blew it. "We lost something,"
Tirun said; "Beeper output," Hilfy said at once. "Loud
and clear. Aunt, is that our decoy?" Pyanfar ignored the
questions, harried. "Longrange com to my board. Now." It came through
unquestioned, a light on her panel. She put the mike in. "This
is Pyanfar Chanur, Hinukku. We've just put a pod out the lock. Call
it enough, hakkikt. Leave off." And breaking that contact,
to Hilfy: "Get that on repeat, imp, twice over; and then cut all
signal output and ID transmission and output the signal on translator
channel five." Half a second of
paralysis: Hilfy reached for the board, froze and then punched
something else over, static-ridden snarl, a hani voice. "Chanur!
Go! We're moving!" It repeated, a rising shriek of urgency like
that of the debris against the hull. "It's not our
timeline," Pyanfar snapped at Hilfy, but Hilfy was already
moving again, outputting one transmission, then clearing, reaching
with ears back and a panicked look after what recording she had been
ordered, however insane. "Prime course laid,"
Haral pronounced imperturbably. "Referent bracketed." "Stand by."
Their acceleration continued: the dust screamed over the hull.
Another screen broke up and recovered. "Aunt," Hilfy
exclaimed, "we're outputting knnn signal." "Right we are,"
Pyanfar said through her teeth. She angled The Pride for system
zenith, where no outgoing ship belonged. A prickle of sweat chilled
her nose, sickly cold, and the wail over the hull continued. "Readout
behind us," Geran said, "confirmed knnn, that ship back
there." Gods rot it, nothing was ever easy. Differential com was
suddenly getting another signal in the sputter of dust. "Chanur!
Go. ..." And a kif voice:
"Regrettable decision, Faha Captain." Pyanfar spat and gulped
air against the drag of g, vision tunneled with the stress and with
anger. Hour old signal, that from the Faha; at least an hour old,
maybe more than that. "Second ship,"
Tirun said. "3/4 by 32 our referent." "Get me Starchaser's
course," Pyanfar said. "Been trying,"
Haral said. "Bearing NSR station, best guess uncertain."
Figures leaped to the number two screen, a schematic covering a
quarter of Urtur's dust-barriered system, below them, system
referent. "Knnn ship,"
Hilfy said, "moving on the beeper. -- Aunt, they're going to
intercept it." Pyanfar hesitated half a
beat in turning, a glance at scan which flashed intercept probable on
that ship trailing them. Knnn, by the gods, knnn were moving on the
decoy, and they were not known for rescues. Something clenched on her
heart, instinctive loathing, and in the next beat she flung her
attention back toward the system schematic. No way to help the Faha.
None. Starchaser was on her own. Knnn had the decoy; kif were not
going to like that. If there ever had been knnn. More than The Pride
could play that dangerous game. The scream on the hull rose in pitch
--
"Screens," she
snapped at Haral. She reached for drive control, uncapped switches.
"Stand by. Going to throw our navigation all to blazes; I'll
keep Alijuun off our nose when we cycle back." She pulsed the
jump drive, once, twice, three times, microsecond darings of the
vanes. Her stomach lurched, pulse quickened until the blood congested
in her nose and behind her eyes, narrowing vision to a hazed
pinpoint. They were blind a third time, instruments robbed of
regained referents, velocity boosted in major increments. Dead, if
Haral failed them now. But they were old hands at Urtur, knew the
system, had a sense where they were even blinded, from a known start. Down the throat of the kif
s search pattern, from zenith ... she pulsed the vanes again, another
increment, swallowed hard against the dinner which was trying to come
up again. Differential com got them a kif howl, and a mahendo'sat
yammering distress. That, for whatever they
had done against Starchaser, skin their backsides for them, a
streaking search for a target. "Ai!" Haral
yelped, and instruments flared, near collision. "Chanur!"
she heard: the name would be infamy here as at Meetpoint. There were
surges and flares all over the board. She pulsed out and in again and
the instruments went manic. "Gods," Haral moaned, "I
almost had it." "Now, Haral! for the
gods' sake find it!" Instruments flickered and
screens static-mad sorted themselves, manifoldly offended. An alien
scream erupted from their own com. Tully, Pyanfar reckoned suddenly:
his drugs were not quick enough. They had betrayed him like the kif. Image appeared on her
number one screen: Alijuun. The star was sighted and bracketed and
the ID was positive. "Hail" she
yelled, purest relief, and hit the jump pulse for the long one. Her
voice wound in and out in a dozen colors, coiled and recoiled through
the lattices which opened for them, and the stomach-wrenching
sensation of jump swallowed them down. ...
VI . . . and spat them up
again, a dizzying percept of elsewhere. A shimmer before her eyes,
that was the screen, and the automated instruments were searching.
Keep conscious, don't go out, not now, keep the hand on controls. . .
. "Working," Haral's low voice drifted to her out of
infinity. "O gods." That was someone else. Hilfy? A star
came into brackets on the screen and wobbled out again. "Check
referent," Pyanfar said. Her blurring eyes sought instruments. A
red light was on. "Got a problem," Haral said, sending cold
chills along her back. "No positive ID on referent." "Brace." She
started aborting the proposed second jump, dumping speed sufficient
for the scanning sensors to make their fix. There was a moan near her
when the shift slammed in. Her hand shook like palsy over the
controls, hovering over the button. "Gods, we've missed,"
Haral moaned; and then Tirun: "Abort! we're vectored massward!" Dark mass was ahead of
them, the mass which had pulled them in from jump, coming up in their
faces. Sensors realized it: alarms went off, dinning through the
ship. Pyanfar dumped again, hard, flinched as screens went static and
one went dead. Something had given way. "Turning," she
warned the crew. The Pride veered in her next skip, and blood started
in Pyanfar's nose, internal organs and joints and flesh hauled in
independent motion. She spat and struggled with the muscles of her
eyes to keep focused, fought a strained muscle to keep her hand at
the controls. Scan showed hairbreadth miss now and she trimmed ship
and let it ride, hurtling for a virtual skim of the obstacle. A kif voice came in over
com. "Identify: urgent." Someone was waiting in this place,
stationed to guard, another of Akukkakk's long arms. "Aunt," Hilfy's
voice came weakly, bubbling liquid. "Kif. . ." "Got it."
Pyanfar sniffed blood or sweat, licked salt from her mouth, staring
at the screens which showed the dark mass hoving up at them . . .
tight skim, incredibly tight. Their own output was still knnn-song,
wailing up and down the scale, tickings and whines . . . that had to
put the kif off. Haral and Tirun talked frantically to each other,
searching with the sensors for their way out. "Got it!" Haral
exclaimed suddenly; a star showed up in the bracket. "Can't do it,"
Pyanfar said: the mass was too close. They had no choice now but to
skim past and hope. "Identify," the
kif voice insisted. Instruments flared of a
sudden, screens going static. "That was fire," Pyanfar said
to Hilfy, "onto our former vector, thank the gods." A second flaring: The
Pride had returned a shot, automatic response. Of a sudden the alarms
went again, crescendo of mechanical panic. "Mass proximity,"
Pyanfar said into allship, for those riding it out below. "We're
going to miss it." The solidity was there, a
sudden jump in every mass/drive instrument on the bridge, lights
flaring red, a static washout on the number four screen: Kita Point
mass, a chunk of rock, a cinder radiating only the dimmest warmth
into the dark, light-less, lonely, and far, far too big for The Pride
to drag with her into jump. . . . Vid picked up flares of
light, massive spots like the glow of a sun in that dark, illumining
the surface of Kita mass. Rock boosted in their field out of Urtur
had not changed vector. It hit the dark mass at near c, pyrotechnics
which flowered the dark. They passed in that flare
of impact, slingshotted with a wrench which brought a new flood of
blood to Pyanfar's throat . . . grayout . . . . . . back again. "Haral!" A frantic moment. "There!"
Then- referent was back in bracket. A kif voice clicked and chattered
out of phase with what they should be getting: that was then a second
ship, lying off Kita zenith. Fire hit them. Pyanfar slammed the drive
back in, with the howl of the kif in her ears, the static spit of
instruments trained on the chaos in their wake. She tried with all
her wits to keep oriented, a .slow reach of a sore arm while matter
came undone about them, while they were naked to the between and time
played games with the senses. No way that the kif could have
followed. They had run the gauntlet. They were through the worst.
After Kita it was one of three destinations and after the next, one
of two more; and the choices multiplied, and the kif had harder and
harder shift to bring numbers to bear against them. . . . "We're fading,"
Haral said, words which stretched through infinity, emotion-dulled,
nowhere: this was the way it went when ships lost themselves, when
they jumped and failed to come out again . . . perhaps some
mathematical limbo ... or straight into mahendo'sat hell, where
four-armed demons invented horrors . . . Pyanfar dragged her wits
together, watched for another such wobble. Damage they had taken
under fire could have done something to the vanes, robbed them of
capacity, might lose them permanently. . . . . . . second arrival, a
blurring downdrop of the senses into here and when again. Pyanfar
reached for the panel and ordered scan search. Differential com was
already getting signal: it was the marker of Kirdu System, wondrous,
beautiful mahendo'sat voice, the buoy of the jump range. "We're in!"
Hilfy cried. "We're in." "Clear and in the
range," Pyanfar said, smug. She hit the jump pulse to throw off
velocity and the smugness evaporated somewhat: the pulse was queasy,
less powerful than it ought to be. "Captain?"
Haral's voice. "I feel it." "Maintain knnn
output?" Hilfy asked. "Yes." Pyanfar
kept her eyes on the readout, hit the pulse again. "Plot entry
vector," she ordered Tirun. "We might have trailed some
debris with us." "Reckon we dumped
most of the rocks on Kita," Tirun muttered. She started sending
the schematic over, fired off a comp-signal warning for what good it
would do a slow ship in the path of their debris-attended entry. The
dump went on, sickly pulses which finally began to count. "That's better,"
Pyanfar said, swallowing against the stress. "Hilfy, got a lag
estimate?" "Approximate,"
Hilfy said in a thin voice. "Thirty-minute roundtrip to station,
estimate." Close, by the gods, too
close. Pyanfar kept the dump pulses going at the closest possible
intervals, kept her eyes nowhere but the center screen now, the
relayed scan from the station buoy which plotted the location of
ships and planets and large objects in the system. Automation had
added in the warning The Pride had sent out, a hazard zone in a cone
headed transzenith of system. "Getting refinement
on course," Haral said as a schematic came up on number two
screen. It took only a little bending: check velocity, the warning
kept flashing. Pyanfar coaxed another dump out of The Pride and made
the slight correction, her senses swimming now with the prolonged
strain of high-velocity reckonings, with stringing her mind along
those distances and speeds which the ship's own comp handled in
special conflict-dumping mode. "Down the slot!"
Tirun cried as the lines matched. They were dead on at last,
free and safe and headed down the approach path station had
preassigned the next incomer in that area of the range. Pyanfar
afforded herself a lighter breath, still with her eyes fixed on the
scan, trying to figure how much more they could dump and how fast.
Let one miner be where he ought not to be, let one skimmer have gone
off for some private reason without advising station in advance, some
idiot crossing the entry lanes, some mad knnn or chi, with whom there
was never any reasoning, navigation hazards wherever they operated. .
. . Sweat ran, or blood. She
sniffed and wiped at her nose, eyes still fixed and hand on the
button. They rode the odds; they came in like a shot, counting on
statistics and blind luck and traffic being exactly where it ought:
one could do that a few times in a lifetime and not run out of luck. "Acquiring station
signal," Hilfy said. "That's tc'a talking now, I think.
It's this knnn signal of ours. . . ." "Cut the signal. Give
station our proper ID. Relay pirate attack; damage and emergency, and
probable accompanying debris." "Got it," Hilfy
said. Pyanfar hit the dump
again, forced them a little more toward a sane speed, and a board
redlighted. She cycled in a backup. Haral unbelted and leaned
into the pit beside her console, frantic readjustments. There might be kif in dock
at Kirdu . . . gods, would be kif here, by all the odds, and just
possibly one of them had come through from Urtur. But this was Kirdu:
mahendo'sat here, in their own territory, had teeth, and took no
arguments from visitors. They would demand explanations for such an
entry. Gods grant whatever remaining debris they had boosted through
with them from Urtur found no mahendo'sat targets, or there would be
more than an explanation due. "Something's left
station," Tirun said. The image showed up on the number two
screen. Ships were outbound, four of them, one after the other,
moving on intercept, dopplering into their path. "Hilfy,"
Pyanfar said, "signal general alert, all hani ships insystem." "Done," Hilfy
said, moving to do it. Haral slid back into place, set to work in
haste at the comp. The number one screen started acquiring estimates,
locational shifts on the oncomers and everything else in the system.
That was station guard which had just put out, more than likely: The
Pride had broken regulations from entry to this moment, heaps and
piles of regulations. Some mangy mahe station official was likely
elbow deep in the rule books this moment hunting penalties, Pyanfar's
nose wrinkled at the thought of the fines, the levies, the arguments. "Getting signal on
the ships outcoming," Hilfy said. "They're mahendo'sat, all
right." "Huh." Pyanfar
blew a sigh of relief. Worse had been possible, worse indeed.
"Geran," she said over allship. "Chur. Are you getting
this down there? We're all right; station's ending us an escort." "Coming in clear,
captain." "Is everything secure
down there? How's Tully? Have you got a monitor on him?" "He's here in op with
us," Geran said. "Drugs are wearing off. He's muzzy but
following what's going on." "No more risks, rot
you; who cleared that? -- Take scan on number four for approach; give
us some relief up here; and get him secure." "I friend."
Tully's voice came back to her, hani words. And others, his own
tongue, a flood of words. "Shut him down," Pyanfar hissed;
and there was silence. "Working," Chur's voice reported,
and Tirun paused in her frantic pace, dropped her head into hands and
wiped them back over her mane. She took the chance for a drink, from
a plastic bottle from under-counter, passed it to Hilfy and then to
Tirun and then to Haral and Haral to Pyanfar. The remnant went down,
a welcome cooling draught. Pyanfar took the chance to call up comp to
locate the damage, gnawed her upper lip as the information came
through incomplete. She looked right, at the others, at Hilfy, who
was listening to something, with a bruised, exhausted look on her
face. "Shunt that below when they get the Outsider settled,"
Pyanfar said to her, and looked at Haral, who was still doing
updates. "Damage indeterminate," she said to Haral
privately. "I don't feel any lag in the insystem responses, at
least. It should be a normal dock, but we're going to have to get a
hurryup on that repair and I don't know how to the gods we're going
to finance the bribe." "Aunt," Hilfy
said, "station is on, wants to talk to you personally. I told
them -- " "Captain."
Lowerdeck overrode, sent up an image on scan. Ship in the jump range,
incoming, on their tail. "Gods," Pyanfar
hissed. "Gods rot all kif -- Hilfy: ID, fast." Hilfy hesitated half a
breath: Tirun was already overreaching a long arm onto her territory.
Wailing came through, and Pyanfar grimaced at the high-pitched
squeal. "Knnn," Tirun
said. "Captain, it's that rotted knnn." "We don't know it's
that knnn," Pyanfar spat back, snatching the mike -- waved an
angry gesture with it at Hilfy. "Station. Station, and get your
wits working, niece." The ready light came on.
"Go," Hilfy said, distraught and J wild-eyed, and subdued
the knnn pickup. "This is Kirdu
Station," the machine-translated voice came through. "We
mahe urgent severe protest this entry. Go slow, hani captain
incoming." "This is The Pride of
Chanur, Pyanfar Chanur speaking. We're incoming with an unidentified
on our tail and with damage, but we have maneuverability. The ship
behind us may pose a threat to station; I suggest your escort direct
its attention to what's following us." Com stayed dead, longer
than lagtime dictated. "Escort is passing
turnover point," Geran's quiet voice came from the other op
center. "Captain, they're going to pass us, going to go out and
look that bastard over." Pyanfar looked, saw,
returned her attention to comp, where new estimate was coming up on
the position of the incoming ship. It was close, moving hard, no dump
of speed. "Got a hani contact,"
said Hilfy. "Tahar." "Gods and thunders."
This was not a friendly house to Chanur. Pyanfar picked up the
contact on her board. "Tahar ship, this is Pyanfar Chanur. Stand
ready for trouble. Don't be caught at dock." "Chanur, this is Dur
Tahar. Is this your trouble?" "It has no patent,
Tahar, not so far. Stand out from station, I warn you. In case." "Chanur," the
translated voice of station broke in on them. "Tahar Captain.
Against regulation, this. "Use station channel. And this station
order stay. No moving out." "We're coming in,
station. We advise you ships are destroyed and lives lost. If that
ship back there is knnn, well; but if it isn't, Kirdu has trouble." Another voice, clicking
and harsh. Kif. "That's from a docked
ship," Hilfy said quickly. "Got it on station directional." "Captain." That
from Tirun. "Incomer's just begun dump; they're checking speed." Pyanfar blinked, the
suspicion of good news hitting dully on a dazed brain. She drew a
whole breath. "Gods grant it is knnn," she muttered.
"Station, you should be getting that now: we'll make a full
explanation as soon as we get in and get our mechanical problems in
order. We strongly urge you take full precautions and get a positive
visual on that so-named knnn arrival. We have serious charges to
lodge." Silence from station. They
were not, most likely, overjoyed. Pyanfar broke the contact.
"Bastards." She wiped her mouth, straightened her beard
with her fingers. "Cowards." The escort passed and headed
out to the incoming ship behind them. She settled back in her cushion
and listened to the reports. "Aunt," Hilfy
said finally, "mahendo'sat report visual confirmation: it is a
knnn ship." "Thank the gods,"
Pyanfar muttered, and threw open the restraint on her cushion, leaned
forward more comfortably. Station was coming up. A flurry of docking
instructions was arriving on the number three screen. Not kif behind them, only
a vastly confused knnn. She gave a wry pursing of the mouth,
imagining the chagrin of the odd creatures, who had arrived to far
more commotion than knnn were wont to stir under any circumstances.
Coincidence, perhaps; ships came and went from everywhere -- gods,
rare to have two ships come into a jump range that close, but not
that rare. Kirdu had a great deal more traffic than that generated by
The Pride. This was civilization, here at Kirdu, civilization, after
all. She drew a series of
quieter breaths. Watched the schematic which showed them the way
toward docking. Tired. Indeed she was tired. She ached in her bones.
It took a moral effort to settle in for docking maneuvers, to do it
by manual because she wanted the feel of it, not to be surprised by
some further malfunction under automatic. She was already mentally
sorting through possible arguments with the Tahar, a loan, anything
to get The Pride's repairs made and paid, to get out of this place:
they needed no more damages than they had, and most of all they did
not need prolonged residence here. If they were very, very
fortunate, the kif were sorting matters out with a certain knnn who
had picked up a bit of salvage at Urtur; and that knnn might not be
amused by a hani joke. The great hakkikt Akukkakk would be even less
amused . . . but he would have a hard time negotiating with the knnn
for a look at its prize; and a harder time with his fellow kif ..
indeed he would. She felt, in all, satisfied. But a knnn had happened
through jump with them; had happened to crowd them. Gods ... did they
have apparatus which made tracking possible? Its voice was back,
distant and eerie, like that which she had duplicated at Urtur, to
use a knnn voice as shield and disguise. Gods knew what message
they had been transmitting to knnn hearing: follow me? Help me?
Something far less friendly? Tc'a might know; but there
was no querying that side of Kirdu Station. They came up on dock,
moving in next the Tahar ship: Kirdu wanted its hani problems
collected, apparently, giving them berths next each other. In some
part that was good, because it gave them private access to talk
without witnesses; and in another part it was not, because it made
them one single target. "Where are the kif?"
she asked station bluntly, stalling on the approach. "I'm not
putting my nose into station until I know what berths they have." "Number twenty and
twenty-one," station informed her. "Mahe and stsho in the
between numbers, no trouble, no trouble, hani captain. You make easy
dock, please." She wrinkled her nose and
committed them, not without contrary thoughts.
VII The Pride's nose went
gently into dock, the grapples clanged to and accesses thumped open,
and Pyanfar thrust back from the panel with a sudden watery feeling
about the joints. Station chattered at them, requests for routine
cooperations. "Shut down," she said curtly, waved a weary
signal at Haral and pushed the cushion round the slight bit it could
go. "Hilfy: tell station offices. Tell them we've got some
shakeup. I'll talk with them when we get internal business settled." "Aye," Hilfy
murmured, and relayed the message, with much flicking of the ears in
talking with the official and a final flattening of them. Pyanfar
shortened her focus, on Tirun, who was running her last few checks.
Her hands made small uncertain movements; her ears were drooping.
"Tirun," Pyanfar said, and Tirun's face when she looked
around showed the strain. "Out," Pyanfar said. "Now." Tirun stared at her half a
moment, and ordinarily Tirun would have mustered argument. She looked
only numb, and pushed back from her place and tried, a faltering
effort which got her to her feet, and a reach which got her to the
next console. They all scrambled for her, but Hilfy was quickest,
flung an arm about her. "She goes to quarters," Pyanfar
said. "Aye," Haral said, and took charge from Hilfy,
replacing Tirun's support on that side. Hilfy stood a moment.
Pyanfar looked on her back, on the backs of Tirun and Haral as Tirun
limped away trying not to limp; and Hilfy straightened her shoulders
and looked back. "I'll stay on the
com," Hilfy offered. "Leave it. Let
station wonder. Clean up." Hilfy nodded stiffly,
turned and walked out, quite, quite without swagger, with a hand to
steady her against the curvature-feeling of the deck when they were
docked. It occurred to Pyanfar then that Hilfy had not been sick, not
this time. Pyanfar drew a deep breath, let it go, turned and leaned
over the com. "Lowerdeck, who's at station?" "Geran," the
voice came back. "All stable below." "Clean up. Above all
get Tully straightened up and presentable." "Understood." Pyanfar broke the
connection. There was another call coming over com. "Chanur, this is
Tahar's Moon Rising. Private conference." "Tahar, this is
Pyanfar Chanur: we have a medical situation in progress. Stand by
that conference." "Do you require
assistance, Pride of Chanur?" There was, infinitesimal
in the tone,, satisfaction in that possibility. Pyanfar sweetened her
voice with prodigious effort. "Hardly, Moon Rising. I'll return
the call at the earliest possible. Chanur's respects, Tahar. Out." She broke off with
abruptness, pushed back and strode off, without swagger in her stride
either. All her joints seemed rearranged, her head sitting
precariously throbbing on a body which complained of abuses. Her nape
bristled, not at kif presence, but at an enemy who sat much closer to
home. Gods. Beg of the Tahar? Of a house which had
presented formidable threat to Chanur during Kohan's holding? The
satisfaction in the Tahar whelp's voice hardly surprised her. It was
a spectacle, The Pride with her gut missing and her tail singed.
There would be hissing laughter in Tahar, the vid image carried home
for the edification of Kahi Tahar and his mates and daughters. And from Tahar it would go
out over Anuurn, so that it would be sure to come to Kohan. There
would be challenges over this, beyond doubt there would be
challenges. Some Tahar whelp would get his neck broken before the
dust settled, indeed he would: young males were always optimists,
always ready to set off at the smell of advantage, the least edge it
might afford them. They would try. So. They
had done that before. That was what Dur Tahar
had wind of.
"She's well enough,"
Haral reported at the door of the crew's quarters on the lower deck.
Pyanfar looked beyond and saw Tirun snugged down in bed and oblivious
to it all. "Leg swelled a bit under the stress, but no worry." Pyanfar frowned. "Good
medical facilities here onstation. But it might be we'd have to pull
out abruptly; I don't want to risk leaving any of us behind for a
layover, not... under the circumstances." "No," Haral
agreed. "No need for that. But we're wearing thin, captain." "I know," she
said. "You too, begging
your leave." "Huh." She laid
her hand on Haral's shoulders. Walked away to the lift, paused there
and listened in the direction of Chur and Geran's post. She walked
back that way and leaned in at the door of op, where Geran sat watch,
washed and in clean blue trousers, but looking on the world with the
dull look someone ought to have who had gone from one on-shift to the
next without sleep. "Right," Pyanfar said simply, recalling
that she had given them orders they were following, and leaned an arm
against the doorframe. "Tully made it all right down here, did
he?" "No trouble from
him." "I'm going to have to
take him up on that work offer. You and Chur trade off with him, one
on and one off. Tirun's ailing." "Bad?" "G stress didn't
favor that leg. We'll rest here as much as we can. I'm going to see
what charity I can get out of Tahar. Need to find out what damage
we've got, first off." "Got a remote on it,"
Geran said, turned about and called it up on the nearest screen.
Pyanfar came into the room, looked at the exterior camera image,
which was from the observation blister, and suffered a physical pang
at the sight. Number one vane had a mooring line snaking loose,
drifting about under station's rotation, and there were panels
missing, dark spots on the long silver bar. "That was our fade,"
Pyanfar said with a belated chill. "Gods. Could have lost it all
coming in with that loose. Going to take a skimmer crew to get that
linked back up, no way the six of us can do it." "Money," Geran
said dismally. "Might have to sell one of us to the kif after
all." "Bad joke,"
Pyanfar said, and walked out. Tully, she had thought,
with an impulse of which she was heartily ashamed. But she kept thinking of
it, all the way up to her own quarters. She stripped and showered,
shed a mass of fur into the drain; dried and combed and arranged her
mane and beard. It was the red silk breeches this time, the gold
armlet, the pendant pearl. She surveyed herself with some
satisfaction, a lift in her spirits. Appearances meant something,
after all. The mahendo'sat were sensitive to the matter, quite as
much as the stsho. Offended prosperity, that
was the tack to take with them. They knew The Pride. As long as it
seemed that Chanur's fortunes were intact and that Chanur was still a
power to reckon with among hani, that long they might hold some hope
of mahendo'sat eagerness to serve. And there was, she
reckoned, smiling coldly at the splendid hani captain in the mirror,
there was deadly earnest in this haste. There was Akukkakk. Gods rot it all. Possibly she had
embarrassed him enough that his own would turn on him. That would
take time to know. A long time out from homeport, keeping her ear
alert for rumor. Get rid of the Outsider
Tully . . . would that the disentanglement were that easy. She stared into her own
eyes, ears flat, and meditated the villainy that any trader seeing
the Outsider would think on naturally as breathing; and after a
little thinking her lips pursed in a grimly smug smile. So, so, so, Pyanfar
Chanur. There was a way to settle more than one problem. Likely Tully
would not like it, but an Outsider who came begging passage could
take what he could get, and it was not in her mind to beg from Tahar. She checked com, found the
expected clutter of messages waiting attention. "Nothing really
urgent," Geran said. "Station's still upset, that's the sum
of them." "Chur's got Tully,
has she, cleaning him up?" "A little problem
there." "Don't tell me
problem. I've got problems. What problem?" "He has his own
ideas, our Tully does. He wants to be shaved." "Gods and thunders.
Washroom?" "Here, now." "I'm coming down
there." She started for the door,
went back and picked up the audio plug for the translator and headed
down in haste. Shaved. Her ears flattened, pricked again in a forced
reckoning that customs were customs. But appearances, by the
gods. . . . She arrived in op in
deliberate haste, found the trio there, Geran, Chur, Tully, all
cleanly and haggard and drowning their miseries in a round of gfi.
They looked up, Tully most anxious of all, still possessed, thank the
gods, of all his mane and beard and decent-looking in a fresh pair of
trousers. "Pyanfar," he
said, rising. "Captain," she
corrected him sternly. "You want what, Tully? What problem?" "Wants the clippers,"
Chur said. "I trimmed him up a bit." She had. It was a good
job. "He wants the beard off." "Huh. No, Tully.
Wrong." Tully sank down again, the
cup of gfi in his two hands, looked chagrined. "Wrong." Pyanfar heaved a sigh.
"That's reasonable. You do what I say, Tully. You have to look
right for the mahendo'sat. You look good. Fine." "Same # hani." "Like hani, yes." "Mahendo'sat. Here." "You're safe. It's
all right. Friendly folk." Tully's mouth tightened
thoughtfully. He nodded peaceably enough. Then he reached a hand
behind his head and knotted the pale mane back in his fingers.
"Right, that?" "No," Pyanfar
said. The hand .dropped. "I do all you say." Pyanfar flicked her ears,
thrust her hands into her waistband. "Do all?" She felt
pricklish in the area of her honor, and the Outsider's pale eyes
gazed up at her with disturbing confidence. "It might frighten
you, what I want. I might ask too much." Some of that got through.
The confidence visibly diminished. "I make you afraid,
Tully?" She gestured wide, toward the bow. "There's a
station out there, Kirdu Station. Mahendo'sat species is the
authority in this place. There's a hani ship docked next to us. Stsho
species too, down the dock." "Kif?" "Two kif ships, not
the same ones. Not Akukkakk's, not likely. Traders. They're trouble
if we linger here too long, but they won't make any sudden move. I
want you to go outside, Tully. I want you to come with me, out in the
open, on station dock, and meet the mahendo'sat." He did understand. A
muscle jerked in his jaw. "I'm crew of this ship," he said.
It seemed a question. "Yes. I won't leave
you here. You stay with me." "I come," he
said. That simply. She stared at
him a moment, deliberately held out her hand toward the cup in his.
He looked perplexed for a moment, then surrendered it to her. She
drank, subduing a certain shudder, handed it back to him, He drank as well, glanced
at her, measuring her reaction by that look, finished the cup. No
prejudices. No squeamishness about other species. She nodded
approval. "Go with you,
captain," Chur offered. "Come on, then,"
Pyanfar said. "Geran, you stay; can't leave the ship with no one
watching things, and the others are off. We're going just to station
offices and back, and it shouldn't be trouble. I don't expect it, at
least." "Right," Geran
said, not without a worried look. Pyanfar put a hand on
Tully's shoulder, realized the chill of his skin, the perpetually
hunched posture when he was sitting. He stood up, shivered a bit.
"Tully. The translator won't work outside the ship, understand.
Once out the rampway, we can't understand each other. So I tell you
here: you stay with me; you don't leave me; you do all that I say." "Go to the offices." "Offices, right."
She laid one sharpclawed fingertip amid his chest. "I'll try to
get it through to you, my friend. If we go about with you aboard in
secret, if we leave mahendo'sat territory with you and go on to
Anuurn, to our own world -- that could be trouble. Mahendo'sat might
think we kept something they should have known about. So we make you
public, let them all have a look at you, mahendo'sat, stsho, yes,
even the kif. You wear clothes, you talk some hani words, you get
yourself registered, proper papers, all the things a good civilized
being needs to be a legal entity in the Compact. I'll get it all
arranged for you. There's no way after you have those papers that
anyone can claim you're not a sapient. I'll register you as part of
my crew. I'll give you a paper and where I tell you, you put your
name on it. And you don't give me any trouble. Does enough of that
get through? It's the last thing I can tell you." "Don't understand
all. You ask. I do it." She wrinkled her nose,
threw an impatient wave of her hand at Chur. "Come on." Chur came. Tully did,
blindly trusting, at which she scowled and walked along in front of
them both to the lock, hands thrust into the back of her waistband,
wondering whether station offices had detectors and whether they
could get away with a concealed weapon, going where they were going.
She decided against it, whatever the other risks.
A watcher stood by the
rampway outside, a mahe dock-worker who scampered off quickly enough
when they showed outside, and who probably made a call to his
superiors . . . the mahendo'sat were discreetly perturbed, polite in
their surveillance. But they were there. Pyanfar saw it, and Chur
did; and Tully turned a frightened look toward the sudden movement.
He talked at them, but the translator was helpless now, outside the
range of the inship pickup, and Pyanfar laid a reassuring hand on his
shoulder and kept him moving. "Just a precaution," she
said, a quiet tone, and looked beyond to the rampway access of Moon
Rising, where a far more hazardous watcher stood, a hani crewwoman. "Better take care of
that business," Pyanfar said to Chur, and diverted heir course
diagonally among the canister-carriers toward Moon Rising. Another hani showed up
outside, on the run: second crewwoman, doubled reflection of the
other, same wide stance and steady stare. At a certain distance
Pyanfar stopped, and waited, and made a subtle sign to Chur, who
strode forward to meet the others. There was an exchange too
quiet for her ears ... no friendliness in the postures, but no overt
unpleasantness. Chur came back, not in haste, not delaying any
either, ears flat. "Their captain's
asleep," Chur reported. "She proposes to come aboard The
Pride when her nap's done. Answer, captain?" "Why should I? I
wasn't advised. But I may let her come. It suits me." She turned
without a glance at the others, put a hand on Tully's hairless back
and steered him away with them. And if the Tahar captain
was in fact sleeping, she would not be by the time those two rag-ears
got back inside, to report the Chanur captain had a companion of
unknown species, headed for station offices. The Tahar had gotten
caught in their own arrogance, and Chanur failed to rise to the
insult, simply walked off. Pyanfar threw a little swagger into the
departure, for the Tahar and for the gaping mahe dockworkers, some of
whom fled in haste to report to superiors or to gather comrades, a
dark-furred and scantly clad crowd. "They noticed,"
Chur said. "That they have."
Pyanfar locked her hands behind her and they strolled along in
company, one tall hani captain in scarlet, one smallish hani
crewwoman in roughspun(blue, and improbably between them, a towering
wide-shouldered Outsider with naked skin and a beautiful golden mane,
excruciatingly conspicuous. Pyanfar suffered an irrepressible rush of
the blood, a tightening of the lips as a crowd began to gather, far
more people than those who worked the docks. Mahendo'sat, dockers and
merchanters and miners and gods knew what else; and a scatter of
stsho, pale and pastel among the crowd, their whitish eyes round as
moons, holding each others' hands and chattering together in shock.
Of the kif . . . no sign as yet, but the rumor would draw them, she
was well sure of that, and wished in that regard that she had that
gun she had thought of taking. They, reached the lift,
pushed the button, mahe giving way about them and crowding back again
at every opportunity, a roar of crowd-noise about them. "Captain,"
someone asked, one of the mahendo'sat. "What is this being?" She turned about with a
grin which lacked all patience, and mahendo'sat who knew hani backed
up, but there was humor in it too, satisfaction at the turmoil. The
lift arrived, and a half dozen startled mahe decided to vacate it,
whether or not they had planned on getting out on this level. They
edged out the door in haste and Pyanfar seized Tully by the arm and
put him inside. Chur delayed while she stepped in, and came last,
lacing the crowd. The door delayed, time enough for anyone else who
thought they wanted to ride up with them, but no one entered. The
door closed, and the lift shot upward. Pyanfar let go of Tully's arm
and put her hand on his back, ready to indicate to him to move out.
He was sweating despite the chill in the air. On the other side of him
Chur patted his arm. The lift stopped once. Those waiting decided
against entering, eyes wide; and the lift went on up. "Friend," Tully
said nervously, out of his scant hani repertoire. "Mahendo'sat and
stsho," Pyanfar said. "Friend. Yes." The car stopped a second
time, a quieter corridor in the office complex. Tully walked with
them, out and down the hall, startling other mahe workers. And stopped, abruptly. A
kif came from the offices ahead, stopped and stared, anonymous in
gray robes and doleful kifish face. Pyanfar seized Tully's arm,
pulled the claws in when he winced, but the sting got him moving.
They passed the kif and the kif turned; Pyanfar did not react to it,
but Chur, crew and unburdened with captaincy, faced about with ears
flat and a snarl on her face. Likely the kif kept staring. Pyanfar
whisked Tully through the welcome office doors ahead and only then
turned to cast a look back; but the kif was on its way, robes aswirl
in its haste, and Chur, ears still flat, joined them inside the
registry office. Tully smelled of sweat. Veins stood out in his arms.
Pyanfar patted his shoulder and looked round the gaudy colored room
at a frozen officeful of mahendo'sat, most standing. "I'm Pyanfar Chanur.
You requested an interview." There was a general
flutter, the foremost of the officials dithering about letting them
through the general registry area to the more secluded complex behind
the doors, with a dozen looks at Tully in the process. "Come along,"
Pyanfar urged him softly, keeping a hand on his elbow, and now she
sweated, reckoning the shocks Tully had endured thus far, a kif in
the hall, close spaces . . . one irrational moment and he could bolt;
or strike at someone -- "Friend," she said, and he stayed
by her. The official let them
through into a luxurious waiting area, thick carpet and pillowlike
couches in bright colors, hastened about providing them refreshment
as they settled on a facing group of couches. "Sit, sit,"
Pyanfar said, providing Tully the example, legs tucked and ankles
crossed, and Chur waited until Tully had settled nervously on the
facing couch. Chur sank down in relief. The official set the
welcoming tray on a portable table in their midst. His dark mahe eyes
were alive with curiosity. "Beg understanding, hani captain . .
. this is -- passenger?" "Crew," Pyanfar
said with a prim pursing of the lips. She accepted the glass the
squatting mahe filled, two-handed mahe style in her holding of it;
and saw to her satisfaction that the mahe had in fact provided three
glasses. He filled the second and gave it to Chur, whose manners were
impeccable, and with some diffidence, offered to Tully. Tully took his after the
same fashion, keen mimic. Pyanfar smiled to herself and smothered the
smile in a sip of mahendo'sat liquor. The official pattered out with
effusive and anxious bows, leaving them alone; and whatever Tully
thought of the liquor he had the self-possession not to flinch from
it. "Friend," Tully
said again, looking worried. Chur, beside him, put a hand on his knee
and he seemed to take reassurance from that. Panic, not quite, but
his skin glistened with sweat, his muscles were taut. Steps sounded
just outside the door at the side of the room and he would have
looked around, but Chur patted his knee and he refrained. The door opened. A handful
of mahendo'sat, important with elaborate bright kilts and collars,
came in on them, one of them attended by a small brown and white
fluff which scurried about the floor at its feet and bristled at the
scent of hani. It hissed and had to be scooped up in the official's
arms; and Pyanfar kept a wary eye on it all the same, rising in
respect to the visitors. Chur and Tully followed her lead, and she
bowed and suffered the mahendo'sat's frankly appraising stare at
Tully. They chattered among themselves, no little disturbed, and some
of that she caught, exclamations of curiosity: the fluff growled, and
its owner -- an elderly mahe whose dark fur was graying and whose
flat face had all the other attributes of age -- looked toward her
with a lowering of the ears. "Chanur captain?" "The same. Have I the
honor to know you?" "Ahe Stasteburana-to,
I." The stationmaster in
person. She made another bow, and the stationmaster did the same,
keeping the equilibrium of the pampered creature in his arms,
soothing its growls unsuccessfully as he straightened again. And with
apparent distraction Stasteburana strolled off, while another of the
company made a stiffer bow and launched into them. "You pay,
Chanur captain, fines for reckless approach. Fines for bring debris
boosted through, danger to all innocent. Fines for reckless haste
near station. For bring hazardous situation." "I spit at your
charges. I dumped the debris at Kita and warned you only in the
remote chance there was still some with me, dumped it, I might add,
and sustained damage protecting your worthless station from injury.
As for fines, you're brigands, bloodsuckers, to prey off a friendly
ship with a long-standing account at this station, when for the
preservation of our lives and the protection of the Compact we had to
come in for shelter against piracy. A hani, a hani, mind, asks
shelter, and when have we ever done such a thing? Are you blind and
deaf as well as greedy?" "We have outrage. We
have knnn act crazy out there. We have report -- " The Personage Stasteburana
held up his aged and manicured hand. His Voice silenced herself and
broke off with a bow, while Stasteburana strolled back, stroking his
ball of fluff, which had never ceased to growl. "You make large
commotion, honorable Chanur, great hani captain, yes, we know you --
long time absent; maybe trade our rival Ajir, but we know you. Good
friend, we. Maybe make deal on fines. But serious matter. Where come
from?" "Meetpoint and Urtur
via Kita, wise mahe." "With this?" An
ears-flat look at Tully. "An unfortunate. A
being of great sensitivity, wise and gentle mahe. His ship was
wrecked, his companions gone . . . he cast himself on my charity and
proves of considerable value." "Value, hani,
captain?" "He needs papers,
wise mahe, and my ship needs repairs." Again Stasteburana walked
away, aloof from the Voice. "Your ship got no cargo," the
Voice spat. "You come empty hand, make big trouble here. You
near ask credit, hani captain; what credit? We make you fines, you
send Anuurn get cargo, maybe two, three hani ship pay off damages.
You got us knnn. You got us kif. We know this. You go talk hani at
next berth, ask she pay your fines." "Trivial. I have
cargo, better than Moon Rising. I make you a deal, indeed I shall, in
spite of your uncivilized behavior. I make a deal all mahendo'sat
will want." The Voice looked at Tully,
and the Personage turned about, moved in with a leisurely grace,
handed the small noisy animal to the Voice, and frowned. Stasteburana
made a further sign to his other three companions, and one of them
called to someone in the hall. It was not easy to make
distinctions of mahendo'sat of the same age and sex and build; but
about the large and relatively plain fellow who answered that summons
. . . there was an instant and queasy familiarity -- particularly
when he flashed a broad gilt-edged smile. Pyanfar sucked in her
breath and tucked her hands behind her, pulling the claws back in. "Captain Ana
Ismehanan-min of the freighter Mahijiru," Stasteburana said
softly. "Acquaintance to you, yes." "Indeed,"
Pyanfar said, and bowed, which gesture Gold-tooth returned with a
flourish. ' "This kif business,"
said Stasteburana, folding his wrinkled hands at his middle.
"Explain, hani Captain." "Who am I to know
what a kif thinks? They let this unfortunate being slip their fingers
and expected me to sell him back, plainly illegal. Then they attacked
a hani ship which was Completely ignorant of the
matter. A Handur ship was completely destroyed unless the captain of
Mahijiru has better news." "No good news,"
Goldtooth agreed sadly. "All lost, hani captain. All. I get away
quick, come here tell story my port." The Personage turned and
tapped Goldtooth on the shoulder, spoke to him in one of those
obscure mahen languages outside her reckoning. Goldtooth bowed
profoundly and backed aside, and Pyanfar looked warily at the
Personage. "You know," she said, to recover the initiative,
"what the kif wanted; and you know that there's no chance of
hiding such a prize, not here, not on Anuurn either. No good hiding
it at all." "I make you -- "
There was a beep from someone's pager. A voice followed, and one of
the attendants came forward in consternation, offered the instrument
to the hand of the Personage Stasteburana. There was talk of knnn:
that much past the local dialect; and the Personage's dark eyes grew
wider. "Where is it?" Pyanfar caught that much of the
conversation, and saw distress among the others. "You come,"
said Stasteburana himself, not using his Voice for instruction, and
swept a gesture to the doorway from which the mahendo'sat had come
into the room. "Come," Pyanfar
echoed to Chur and Tully, and walked along amid the mahe, the
attendants and the Voice and the captain of Mahijiru, all in the wake
of the Personage, who was-hastening with some evident alarm. The corridor debouched on
an operations center. Technicians in the aisles melted aside for the
Personage and his entourage. The Voice hissed orders, and the fluff
hissed too, in general menace. On the air a tc'a spoke, a sound like
static bursts and clicking. "Screen,"
Stasteburana ordered in his own tongue. The main screen livened in
front of them, meters wide and showing a dimly lit dockside. Blues
and violets, a horrid light, like nightmare, and a scuttling shape
like a snarl of hair possessed of an indefinite number of thin black
legs. It darted this I way and that, dragging with it, clutched in
jaws -- appendages-- under the hair? -- something which glittered
with metal and had the look of a long-limbed hani body. With a sinking feeling
Pyanfar recognized it. It was a good J bet that Chur and Tully did,
who had conspired in its construction. "That's a knnn,"
Pyanfar said to Tully. He said something I back, short and unhappy.
On the screen the creature scurried I this way and that with its
burden, eluding the attempts of writhing shapes in the shadows which
tried to deal with it: those were tc'a. Something stiltlike joined
the commotion, darted at the flitting knnn and tugged at the prize,
skittered off again. CM, by the gods: those manic beggars; the limbs
glowed phosphorescent yellow, left confusing trails on the screen in
its haste. Of a sudden a pair of tc'a
writhed into the knnn's way, physically dispossessed the knnn of its
burden; and the knnn darted about the harder, wailing with rage or
distress or simply trying to communicate. The scene was complete
chaos; and suddenly more knnn poured in. The solitary chi fled, a
blur of yellow-glowing sticks; and in the mahendo'sat control center,
technicians who had been seated stood up to watch what had become
riot. Hisses and clicks and wails came from the audio. The knnn began
to give ground, a phalanx of hairy snarled masses. Suddenly one darted
forward, seized one of the leathery, serpent-shaped tc'a and dragged
it off into their retreating line. There was a frantic hissing and
clicking from the mass of tc'a; but apart from a milling about, a
writhing and twining of dozens of serpentine bodies like so many
fingers lacing and unlacing in distress . . . nothing Not the least
attempt at counterattack or rescue. Pyanfar watched the kidnapping
with her ears laid back. So the knnn had traded,
after its fashion, darted onto station and laid down its offered
goods -- made off with something it took for fair; and now another
species had descended to trading in sapients. "What is it?" a
mahe asked distressedly, and fell silent. The main body of the tc'a
managed to drag the knnn's trade goods along, a grotesque flailing of
suited arms and legs. A communication came through, and a technician
approached the Personage Stasteburana. "Hani-make eva-pod,"
that one said, and Stasteburana turned a disturbed glance on Pyanfar,
who lifted her ears and assumed her most careless expression. "I shouldn't want to
disturb you," Pyanfar said. "All you'll find in that suit,
wise mahe, is a very spoiled lot of meat from our locker; I'd advise
you take decontamination precautions before taking that pod helmet
off." "What you do?"
Stasteburana spoke in anger without his Voice, and waved his Voice
off when she attempted to intervene. "What you do, Chanur
captain?" "The knnn seems to
have intercepted a gift of mine meant for the kif. It's confused, I'm
sure. Probably it'll return the tc'a. -- It was, at the time, a
matter of necessity, revered mahe." "Necessity!" "Only spoiled food, I
assure you. Nothing more. -- We were on the point of discussing
repairs to my ship . . . which are urgent. You'll not want me sitting
at your dock any longer than you have to. Ask the honest captain of
Mahijiru." "Outrage!" the
Voice proclaimed. "Extortion!" "Shall we discuss the
matter?" The fluffball suffered
another transfer, to the nearest of the dignitaries, and the Voice
looked to be preparing for verbal combat; but the Personage lifted a
placid and silencing hand, motioned the group back down the corridor,
delaying to give an instruction regarding the tc'a. Then the
Personage led the way back into the comfortable room down the
corridor. "Profit,"
Pyanfar said quickly and soothingly when the elder mahe and his
entourage turned to face her and hers. "Trouble first with
kif and now with knnn and with tc'a. Deceptions and hazards to this
station." "A new species,
revered mahe. That's the prize that has the kif disturbed. They see
the hope of profit the like of which they've not known before; and I
have the sole surviving member of his company, a spacefaring people,
communicative, civilized, wise mahe, and fit to tilt the balance of
the Compact. This was the prize at Meetpoint. This was the reason of
the loss of the Handur ship, and this was the part of my cargo I
refused to jettison. Surely we agree, revered mahe, what the kif
meant to do if they had gotten this information first. Shall I tell
you more of my suspicions . . . that the stsho knew something about
what was going on? That kif meant to annex a large portion of
adjacent space . . . having intimidated the stsho? That having done
so, they would then be in a position to expand their operations and
rearrange the map of the Compact to suit themselves -- an acquisition
from which the other members of the Compact would be positionally
excluded; only the stsho . . . who would lick the kif s feet. And
what future for the Compact then? What of this Compact which holds
all of our very profitable trade together? What of the balance of
things? But I shall tell you what I have: a tape, a tape, my good, my
great and farsighted mahe elder, for a symbol translator. ... a tape
which the kif spent sapient lives to obtain and failed to get. We
aren't selfish; I make this tape available to mahendo'sat as freely
as hani, in the interests of spreading this knowledge as far as
possible among likeminded people. But I want my ship repaired, the
fines forgotten, the assurance that Chanur will continue in the
friendship of this great and powerful station." The Personage laid his
ears back, his eyes dilated. He turned away, leaving his Voice to
face the matter. "Where come this creature? How we know sapient?
How we know friendly?" "Tully," Pyanfar
said, and put a hand on his arm and drew him forward. "Tully,
this is the Voice of the stationmaster . . friend, Tully." For a terrible moment that
arm was tense, as if Tully might bolt. "Friend," he said
then obediently. The Voice frowned, peered this way and that at
Tully's face ... on a level with the mahe's own. "Speak hani?"
the Voice asked. "I go on Pyanfar
ship. Friend." Gods. A sentence. Pyanfar
squeezed the arm and put him protectively behind her. The Voice
frowned; and behind the Voice the Personage had turned back with
interest. "You bring this trouble to us,"
Stasteburana said. "And knnn . . . why knnn?" "A resident of Urtur.
I claim no understanding of knnn. It's become disturbed . . . but not
of my doing, noble mahe. The safest thing for Kirdu Station in all
events is to have me safely on my way . . . and to have that, I fear,
there's a matter of certain essential repairs -- " The elder flared his
nostrils and puffed breaths back and forth. He consulted with his
Voice, who spoke to him rapidly involving kif and knnn. The Personage
turned back yet again. "This tape deal -- " " -- key to another
species, revered mahe. Mahendo'sat will have access to this
development; meet ships of this kind -- assured peaceful meeting,
full communication. And mind, you deal with no stranger, no one who
will cheat you and be gone. Chanur expects to be back at Kirdu in the
future, expects -- may I speak to you in confidence -- to develop
this new find." Stasteburana cast a
nervous glance at Tully. "And what you find, a? Find trouble.
Make trouble." "Are you willing to
have the kif do the moving and the growing and the getting? They
assuredly will, good mahe, if we don't." The Personage made nervous
moves of his hands, walked to the one of his companions who held the
angry ball of fluff and took it back, stroking it and talking to it
softly. He looked up. "Repairs begin," Stasteburana said,
and walked near Tully, who stood his ground despite the growling
creature in the mahe's arms. The growling grew louder. The mahe stood
and stared a long moment, gave a visible twitch of the skin of his
shoulders and lifted a hand from his pet to sign to his Voice. "Make
papers this sapient being. Make repairs. All hani go. Go away."
He looked suddenly at Pyanfar. "But you give tape. We say
nothing to kif." "Wise mahe,"
Pyanfar said with all her grace, and bowed. The Personage waggled
fingers and dismissed them in the company of the Voice, and the fluff
growled at their backs.
So, Pyanfar thought, as
they delayed at the desks outside, as nervous mahendo'sat officials
went through the mechanics of identifications with Tully. So they had
promises. She kept her ears up, her expression pleasant, and smiled
with extraordinary goodwill at the deskdwellers. Chur kept her hand
hovering near Tully's arm, at his back, constantly reassuring him at
this and that step, answering for him, keeping him calm when they
wanted his picture, urging him to sign where appropriate. Pyanfar
craned forward, got a glimpse of a signature of intricate regularity
which could not be an illiterate's mark in anyone's eyes. "Good," she
said, patted Tully on the shoulder as the document went back into the
hands of mahendo'sat officials -- looked about again, nose wrinkling
to a scent of perfume, for two stsho had just come into the offices.
They stood there with their jeweled pallor looking out of place in
mahendo'sat massive architecture, the huge blocky desks and the
garish colors. Moonstone eyes stared unabashedly at Tully and at
them. Capacious stsho brains stored up a wealth of detail for gossip,
which stsho traded like other commodities. Pyanfar bared her teeth at
them and they wisely came no closer. The papers came back,
plasticized and permanent, with Tully's face staring back from them,
species handwritten, classification general spacer semiskilled, sex
male, and most of the other circles unfilled. The official gave the
folder to Pyanfar. She gave it to Tully, clapped him on the shoulder,
faced him about and headed him for the door, past the gawking stsho. Elsewhere, she trusted,
orders were being passed which would get a repair skimmer prioritied
for The Pride. The mahendo'sat's prime concern had become getting rid
of them at utmost speed: she did not doubt it. There would be a mahe
official demanding that tape before all was done: that was beyond
doubt too. There would be some little quibble which came first,
repairs or tape; repairs, she was determined. The mahe had little
choice. They walked the corridor
to the right from the office doorway, toward the lift, the three of
them, past occasional mahendo'sat office workers and business folk
who either found reason to duck back into their doorways or anxiously
tried to ignore them. But the three who waited
before them at the lift. . . Pyanfar stopped half a step, made it a
wider one. "You," she said, striding forward, and the
foremost mahe stood out from his two companions, gilt teeth hidden in
a black scowl. "Bring trouble, you,"
said the captain of Mahijiru. "How you live, mahe?
A? Sell information every port you touch?" "My port, Kirdu. You
make trouble." "Huh. Trouble found
me. Got crew shot getting you your rotted welders to keep our deal.
Do I say anything about pearls you owe me? No. I give you a gift,
brave mahe. I ask no return." Goldtooth frowned the
more, looked at Chur and walked closer to Tully, tilted his round
chin and looked Tully up and down, but kept his hands off him. Then
he threw a glance at Pyanfar. "This you pick up on the dock." "You ask questions
for the Personage? Same you gather information at Meetpoint?" For the first time the
mahe flashed that sharpedged gold grin. "You clever, hani
captain." "You know this
Akukkakk." The grin died, leaving
deadly seriousness. "Maybe." "You really merchant,
mahe captain?" "Long time, honest
hani. Mahijiru longtime merchant ship, me, my crew, longtime
merchanter, sons and daughters mer-chanters. But we know this
Hinukku, yes. Longtime bad trouble." Pyanfar looked into that
broad dark face and wrinkled her nose. "Swear to you, mahe
captain -- I didn't think to bring trouble down on you. I give you
the trade goods, make no claim for return. You saved our hides, put
us onto that kif bastard. Owe you plenty for that." The mahe frowned. "Deal,
hani. They make you repair, you get quick leave . . . danger. Tell
you that free." "Mahijiru took no
damage getting out of Meetpoint?" "Small damage. You
take advice, hani." "I take it." She
pressed the lift button, took a second look, to remember the face of
this mahe beyond doubt. "Come," she said as the lift
arrived empty. She shepherded Chur and Tully through the door and
turned once inside. Goldtooth/ Ismehanan and his companions showed no
inclination to go with them. The door closed between and the lift
started down. She looked back, at Tully and at Chur, and gathered
Tully by the elbow as the car, unstopped this time by other
passengers, made the whole trip down and let them out on the docks. The crowd had dispersed
somewhat, thank the gods; but not enough. It gathered quickly enough
as they crossed the dock, and Pyanfar watched on all sides, flicking
quick glances this way and that, reckoning that by now, trouble had
time to have organized itself. And it was there. Kif --
by the gantries, watching. That presence did not at all surprise her.
Tully failed to spot them, seeming dazed in the swirl of bodies, none
of which pressed too closely on them, but stayed about them. The rampway access gaped
ahead. A group of mahendo'sat law enforcement stood there, sticks in
hand, and the crowd went no farther. Pyanfar thrust her companions
through that line, with her own legs trembling under her -- want of
sleep, gods, want of rest. Chur was in the same condition, surely,
and Tully was hardly steady on his feet, unfit mentally and
physically for this kind of turmoil. She sighted on the rampway and
went, hard-breathing. But among the gantries
beside them . . . hani shadows. Moon Rising's folk, none of her own,
had spilled over from the next berth, behind the security line. "Come
on," she said to Chur and Tully. "Ignore them." She headed into the
rampway's ribbed and lighted gullet, had led the two of them up the
curving course almost to the security of their own airlock when she
heard someone coming behind. "In," she said to her
companions, and turned to bar the intruder who appeared around the
curve. Her ears were flat; she reached instinctively for the weapon
she had left behind -- but the figure was hani, silk-breeched and
jeweled, striding boldly right up the rampway. "Tahar," she
spat, waved a dismissing hand. "Gods, do we need complications?" "I've done napping."
The Tahar captain stopped just short of her, took her stance, hands
at her waist, a large figure, with a torn left ear beringed with
prosperity. Broadfaced ... a black scar crossed her mustache, making
it scant on the left side, and giving Dur Tahar no pleasant
expression. Her beard was crisply rippled and so was her mane,
characteristic of the southerners, dark bronze. Two of her crew
showed up behind her, like a set of clones. "We've managed,"
Pyanfar said, "without troubling your rest." Dur Tahar ignored her,
looked beyond her shoulder -- at what sight, Pyanfar had no trouble
guessing. "What's that thing, Chanur? What creature is that?" "That's a problem
we've got settled, thank you." "By the gods,
settled! We've just been ordered off the station, and it's all over
the dock about this passenger of yours. About hani involved with the
kif. About a deal you've made -- by the gods, I'll reckon you've
settled things. -- What are you, trading in live bodies now? You've
found yourself something special, haven't you? That fracas that sent
you kiting in here with your tail singed -- involved with that?" "That's enough."
Her claws came out. She was tired, gods, shaking on her feet, and she
stared at Dur Tahar with a dark tunnel closing about her vision. "If
you want to talk about this, you ask me by com. Not now." "Ah. You don't need
our help. Are you planning to stay here in dock with your tail
hanging... or did you and the mahendo'sat come up with a deal? What
kind of game are you proposing, Chanur?" "I'll make it clear
enough. Later. Get clear of my airlock." "What species is it?
Where from? The rumor flying the docks says kif space. Or knnn. Says
there's a knnn ship here that dropped a hani body." "I'll tell it to you
once, Tahar: we got this item at Meetpoint and the kif took out
Handur's Voyager for spite, no survivors. Caught them sitting at
dock, and they and we hadn't even been in communication. We dumped
cargo and ran for Urtur, and the kif who followed us struck at Faha's
Starchaser with no better reason. Whether Starchaser got away or not
I don't know, but they At least had a run at it. The kif want this
fellow badly. And it's gotten beyond simple profit and loss with
them. There's a hakkikt involved, and there's no stopping this thing
till we've got him. Maybe we did, at Urtur. He looked bad, and that
may settle it. But if you want to make yourself useful, you're
welcome to run our course." "Suppose you make
yourself generous. Give this thing into my hands. I'll see it gets
safe to Anuurn." "No, thanks." "I'll bet not. You
can deal with the mahendo'sat, after all, but not with a rival. Well,
Chanur's not going to sit on this one, I'll promise you that, Pyanfar
Chanur. And if this turns out to be the fiasco it promises to be,
I'll be on your heels. That brother of yours is getting soft. Back
home, they know it. This should do it, shouldn't it?" "Out!" "Give me the
information you traded the mahendo'sat. And we may view things in a
better light." "If you were mahe I'd
trust you more. Look him over, Dur Tahar. But anything else you want
to know . . . I'll decide on when I've got this straightened out.
Never fear; you'll get the same data I gave the mahendo'sat. But if
you leave this in our laps, then by the gods, we'll settle it our way
without your help." Dur Tahar laid her ears
back and started to go, lingered for one poisonous look beyond,
toward the airlock, and a focus snapped back on center. "I'll
ask you at Anuurn, then. And you'll have answers, gods rot you.
You'll come up with them." "Nothing personal,
Tahar. You always did lack vision." "When you beg my help
-- I might give it." "Out." Dur Tahar had made her
offer. Perhaps she expected a different answer. She flinched, managed
a lazy indifference, smoothed her rippled beard, turned and looked
back toward the airlock a last time, slowly, before she stalked out,
gathering her two crewwomen as she went. "Gods," Pyanfar
muttered through her teeth, put a hand wearily to the rampway wall
and turned about to the airlock, feeling suddenly older. That was
muffed. She should have been quicker on her mental feet, slower of
temper. The Tahar might have been talked into it. Maybe wanted to be
talked into it. If a Tahar could be trusted at their backs. She hated
the whole of it, mahe, Tahar, Outsider, all of it -- winced under
Chur's stare. Not a word from Chur the whole way back, regarding the
business she had conducted, this tape -- selling, trust-selling. And Tully's face ... of a
sudden he jerked away from Chur's grip and went into the airlock,
Chur hastening to stop him. Pyanfar broke into a run into the
hatchway, but Chur had got him. Tully had stopped against the inside
wall, his back against it, his eyes full of anger. "Captain," Chur
said, "the translator was working." Pyanfar reached into her
pocket and thrust her audio plug into her ear, faced Tully, who
looked steadily toward her. "Tully. That was not a friend. What
did you hear? What?" "You're same like
kif. Want the same maybe. What deal with the mahendo'sat?" "I saved your
miserable hide. What do you think? That you can travel through
Compact territory without everyone who sees you having the same
thoughts? You didn't want to deal with the kif -- good sense; but by
the gods, you haven't got a choice but us or the kif, my friend
Tully. All right. I traded them the tape you made -- but not that I
couldn't have gotten the ship repair without that: they're anxious to
get rid of us; they'd have come round tape or no tape, you can bet
they would. But now everyone's going to know about your kind; gods,
let the mahendo'sat make copies of it; let them sell it in the
standard kit. It's the best deal you can get. I'm not selling you,
you rag-eared bastard; can I make you understand that? And maybe if
your ships meet our ships . . . there'll be a tape in the translators
that may keep us from shooting at each other. We meet and trade.
Understand? Better deal than the kif give you." A tremor passed over his
face, expressions she could not read. The eyes spilled water, and he
made a move of his arm, jerked at Chur's grip on it and Chur
cautiously let him go. "You understand me?"
Pyanfar asked. "Do I make myself understood?" No response.
"You're free,"
Pyanfar said. "Those papers let you go anywhere. You want to
walk out the rampway, onto the dock? You want to go back to station
offices and stay with the mahe?" He shook his head. "That's no." "No. Pyanfar. I #." "Say again." He reached to his waist
and drew out the papers, offered them to her. "Your papers,"
Pyanfar said. "All in order. Go anywhere you like." He might have understood.
He pointed toward the door. "This hani -- want me go with him." "Her. Dur Tahar. No
friend of mine. Or to this ship. Nothing that concerns you." He stood a moment, seeming
to think it over. Finally he pointed back toward the inner hatch. "I
go sit down," he said, shoulders slumping. "I go sit.
Right?" "Go," she said.
"It's all right, Tully. You're all right." "Friend," he
said, and touched her arm in leaving, walked out with his head down
and exhaustion in his posture. "Follow him?" Chur asked. "Not conspicuously.
Docking's got his quarters out of commission. Get a proper cot for
the washroom." "We could take him
into crew quarters." "No. I don't want
that. There's nothing wrong with the washroom, for the gods' sake.
Just get him a sedative. I think he's had enough." "He's scared,
captain. I don't much blame him." "He's got sense. Go.
Tell Geran if she doesn't hear something about that repair crew
within half an hour, come get me." "Aye," Chur
murmured, and hastened off in Tully's wake. So. Done, for good or ill.
Pyanfar leaned against the wall, aching in all her bones, her vision
fuzzing. After a moment she walked out, down the vacant corridor
toward the lifts, hoping to all the gods Geran could find no incident
to put between her and bed. No one stopped her. She
rode the lift up, walked a sleep-drunken course down the central
corridor to her own door. "Aunt," Hilfy's
voice pursued her. She stopped with her hand against the lockplate
and looked about with a sour and forbidding stare. "Repair crew's on its
way," Hilfy said ever so quietly. "I thought you'd want to
know. Message just came." "You've been sitting
watch topside?" "Got a little rest. I
thought -- " "If Geran's on, it's
waste to duplicate effort. Get yourself back to quarters and stay
there. Sleep, gods rot you; am I supposed to coddle you later? Take
something if you can't. Don't come complaining to me later." "Captain," Hilfy
murmured, ears back, and bowed. Pyanfar hit the bar and
opened the door, walked in and punched it closed before the automatic
could function. Belatedly the look on Hilfy's face occurred to her;
and the long duty Hilfy had spent at com through transit, and that
she had intended to say something approving of that, and had not. Gods rot it. She sat down
on the side of the bed and dropped her head into her hands. Gods,
that she had staggered through the requisite interview with the
mahendo'sat, bargained with them, offended the Tahar -- and Tully ...
she had traded off what three of his shipmates had died to keep to
themselves. In such a condition she
gambled, with Chanur and Tully's whole species on the board. She dropped her hands
between her knees, finally reached for the bedside drawer where she
kept a boxful of pills. She shook one into her hand and put it into
her mouth -- spat it out in sudden revulsion and flung the open
boxful across the cabin. Pills rattled and circled and lay still. She
lay down on the bed as she was, drew the coverlet over herself,
tucked her ;arms about her head and shut her eyes, flinging herself
into an extended calculation about their routing out of here and
refusing to let her mind off that technical problem. She built the
numbers in front of her eyes and fended off the recollection of
Tully's face or Hilfy's, or the scuttling figure of the knnn with its
prize, or the kif which skulked and whispered together out on the
docks.
VII "Aunt." It was not com; it was
Hilfy in person, leaning over her bed, shaking at her. "Aunt."
Pyanfar came out of sleep with a wild reach to get her elbow under
her, shook herself, stared into Hilfy's dilated eyes. "It's
Starchaser," Hilfy said. "They've come through. They're in
trouble. They can't get dumped. The word just came in -- " "O gods."
Pyanfar kicked the coverlet off, scrambled out dressed as she was and
seized Hilfy by the arm on her way out of the room. "Talk, imp:
has anyone scrambled?" "Station's called
miners in the path . . . some mention of an outbound freighter being
able to change course. ..." Hilfy let herself be pulled through
the doorway into the corridor and loped along keeping up with her on
the way to the bridge. "They're twenty minutes lag out, crossing
Lijahan track zenith." "Twenty now?" "About." Haral was on the bridge,
standing by scan, with the area-light on her face, and her expression
was grim when she looked around at their arrival. "They've got
to get to the pod," Haral said. "No way anyone can get to
her in time. No way any rescue can haul that mass down, even if she's
stripped." "What's our status?" "We can't get there,"
Hilfy objected, plain logic. "Not for rescue,"
Pyanfar said quietly. "Repairs underway,"
Haral said. "Vane's unsecured. If they're running ahead of
company -- we're in trouble." Tirun came limping in,
loping haste, and there was a query from lowerdeck. "You're
getting all we've got," Haral relayed to Geran and Chur below.
"Can't tell anything yet." "Come on,"
Pyanfar muttered to the blip on systemic image. "Do it, Faha.
Get out of there." She sank down into the com cushion, an eye
still toward the screen, and punched through the station op code.
"This is The Pride of Chanur. Urgent relay the stationmaster,
Pyanfar Chanur speaking: warn you of possible hostile pursuit on tail
of incoming emergency. Repeat: warn you of possible hostile pursuit
of incoming emergency." "This message receive
clear, Pride of Chanur. Mahen ships answer emergency. Please stand
by." She watched scan, rested a
knuckle against her teeth and hissed a breath. Ships showed in the
schematic, traffic at dead standstill compared to the incoming streak
that was Starchaser, motion slowed enough to see only because of
systemwide scale. Everything was history, the images on the scope,
the voices from the zone of emergency. Unable to dump velocity,
Starchaser would streak helplessly across the system and lose herself
on an unaimed voyage to infinity. It was a long way to die. "Lost the
transmission," Haral said. Hilfy edged in, looking desperate,
tried the switches herself past Haral's side. Pyanfar gnawed the
underside of a^ claw and shook her head. The business of getting a
jump-mazed crew on their feet and headed to the escape pod -- in
Starchaser's type, high up on the frame -- and get it away, all this
within the minutes they had left. . . Then they could only hope,
if they could make it that far, that the pod's engines could hammer
down the velocity, give some jumpship the chance to match velocities
and lock onto the pod's small, manageable mass, so that they could be
dumped down. That freighter out there was the best chance the crew
had, if only they could get loose. "Pod's away!"
Haral exclaimed, and Tirun and Hilfy were pounding each other on the
back. Pyanfar clenched her two hands together in front of her mouth
and stared flateared at the scan, where a new schematic indicated the
probable course of the pod which had now parted company with doomed
Star-chaser. Both dots advanced along the track, but a gap developed,
the pod's deceleration far from sufficient to rid itself of a
jumpship's velocity before it gave out, but doing what it could. The
crew would likely black out in the stress: that was a mercy. Now it
was a race to see if the freighter could overhaul the pod or whether
the pod would leave the system. "Mahe freighter?"
Pyanfar asked. Haral nodded. The Pride was on
station-fed transmission; and station had to be using the feed from
ships farther out, the Lijahan mines, whatever was in a position to
have data, and relative time was hard to calculate now. The freighter
came up by major increments while the minutes passed, boosting itself
on its jump field. The gap still narrowed with agonizing
sluggishness, as scan shifted, keeping up with events which were now
long decided. Com sputtered, a wailing
transmission. Knnn. "Gods," Tirun said. "A knnn's out
there in it." Station command responded,
a tc'a voice. There were other transmissions, knnn voices, more than
one, a dissonance of wails. "Chanur," said a
hani voice, clear and close at hand. "Is this also your doing?" Pyanfar reached for it,
punched in the contact, retracted the claw with a moral effort.
"Tahar, is that a question or a complaint?" "This is Dur Tahar.
It's a question, Chanur. What do you know about this?" "I told you. Let's
keep it off com, Tahar." Silence. The Tahar were no
allies of the Faha crew. It was a Chanur partisan in trouble, but if
any ship at station could have moved in time, Moon Rising would have
tried: she did not doubt it. It was a painful thing to watch, what
was happening on scan. Close to her, Tirun had settled, and Hilfy,
simply watching the screen while her Faha kinswomen and the wreckage
that had been a Faha ship hurtled closer and closer to the boundaries
of the pickup. After such a point insystem scan could not follow
them. Station was getting transmission now from a different source,
from the merchanter Hasatso, the freighter tracking Starchaser, the
only ship in range. The blip that was Starchaser itself finally went
off the screen. "Chanur ship,"
station sent. "Tahar ship. Advise you merchanter Hasatso have
make cargo dump; do all possible." "Chanur and Faha will
compensate," Pyanfar replied, and hard upon that Moon Rising
sent thanks to Hasatso via station. "Gods look on them,"
Haral muttered -- a cargo dumped, to close the gap, to close on an
emergency not of their species. Knnn wailed. Elsewhere
there was silence. For a long while there seemed only one rhythm of
breaths on The Pride, above and below. "They're nearly on
it," Hilfy breathed. "They've got them,"
said Tirun. "No way they can miss now." It went slowly. The
transmissions from Hasatso became more and more encouraging; and at
long last they reported capture. "Hani signal," Hasatso
told Kirdu Station, "in pod. Live." Pyanfar breathed out the
breath she had been holding. Grinned, reached and squeezed Hilfy's
arm. Hilfy looked drained. "Tahar," Pyanfar sent then, "did
you receive that report?" "Received,"
Tahar said curtly. Pyanfar broke it off, sat
a moment with hands clasped on the board in front of her. A ship
lost; a tradition; that deserved its own mourning. Home and life to
the Faha crew, and that was gone. "Station," she sent after
a moment, "advise the Faha crew that Chanur sends its profound
sorrow, and that ker Hilfy Chanur par Faha will offer the resources
of The Pride of Chanur, such as they are." \ "Advise them,"
another voice sent directly, "that Dur Tahar o/Tahar's Moon
Rising also offers her assistance." That was courtesy. Pyanfar
leaned back in the cushion, finally turned and rose with a stretch of
her shoulders. "What can be done's done. Go fetch something to
drink, Hilfy; if I'm roused out, someone owes me that. Drink for all
that want it. Breakfast. I'll hear reports less urgent during. --
Haral, who's supposed to be on duty?" "I am." "So. Then close down
lowerdeck. Tirun, back you go." "Aye' Tirun muttered,
and levered herself up stiffly and limped off in Hilfy's wake.
Pyanfar settled against the com post counter and looked at Haral,
seated at the number two spot. "That knnn's fallen
into pattern about Lijahan," Haral said, paying attention to the
screens. "Still making commotion. A wonder they don't try for
the cargo salvage out there." "Huh. Only grant they
all stay put." "Skimmer's still
working out there at our tail. They've got a crew outside working the
connectors. The cable's ready to secure. But fourteen panels were
missing and six loose, and they estimate another twenty hours working
shift on shift to get the new ones hooked up." "Gods." Pyanfar
ran a hand over her brow and into her mane, thinking of kif -- of
attack which had chewed Starchaser to scrap. There were others
besides the knnn who might be expected to rush to that salvage out
there; there were the onstation kif ... who showed no sign of moving.
That was unnatural. No one was moving, except maybe a few miners out
there with ambition. No one from station. Word was out; rumor . . .
had a wind up everyone's back. "The Tahar,"
Haral said further, after a moment, "appealed that order to put
out with an appeal to finish cargo operations. It was allowed." "Helpful. At least
they're here." "Helpful as the Tahar
in general. Begging your pardon." "I'll talk to them." "You think Tahar'd
move to guard our tail?" "No," she said.
"I don't. Not unless they see profit in it. What are they doing?
Not taking cargo." "Offloading.
Stripping to run. Canisters pouring out like maggots." Pyanfar nodded. "Station
wants that cargo safe then; and Tahar's going to dump that out fast
down to the bit she uses to stall with. The Personage has backed
down, that's what; got a few of his onstation companies wailing about
losses, and Tahar'll stay here as long as she likes. That'll give me
time." "Gods, the bill on
this." "Expensive, our
Outsider. In all senses." She looked about as Hilfy came through
the archway with a large tray, two cups and two breakfasts. "Thanks,"
Pyanfar said, taking plate and cup . . . paused to look at Hilfy, who
had stopped to look at the situation on the screen. They were still
getting transmission relayed from Hasatso, with occasional breakup
which indicated velocity dump. "Going to be a while,"
Pyanfar said. "Unless they've got a medical emergency I doubt
they'll boost up again after turnover, just ride it slow in. Hours
from now. Go on back to quarters. I mean it." A few ports ago Hilfy
might have argued, might have laid her ears back and sulked. She
nodded now and went. Pyanfar slid a glance at Haral, who stared after
the retreating youngster and then nodded once, thoughtfully. "Huh," Pyanfar
said, digging into the breakfast, and for some little time she and
Haral sat and watched the scan and ate. "Tell you, cousin,"
Pyanfar said finally, "you go off-watch and I'll take it." "Not needful,
captain." "Don't be noble. I've
got some things to do. One thing you can do for me. When you go down,
look in on Tully. Make sure he's all right." "Right," Haral
said. She stood up and gathered the dishes onto the tray. "But
he's all right, captain. Chur's bedded down to keep an eye on him." Pyanfar had been finishing
her last sip of gfi, to surrender the cup. She banged it down on the
tray. "Gods blast -- Did I or did I not order him separate?" Haral's ears dropped in
dismay. "Chur said he was upset, captain; made herself a pallet
in the washroom so's he wouldn't wake up by himself. She said -- your
pardon, captain -- sedated, he looked so bad -- You were in bed,
captain. It was my discretion." Pyanfar exhaled shortly.
"So. Well. Depressed, Chur Says." Haral nodded. "We'd
take him," Haral said. I "Chur said."
"Um." Haral
figured that train of things of a sudden and her mustache-hairs drew
down. "Sorry, captain." "Him, for the gods'
sake." "Not as if he was
hani, captain." "Not as if,"
Pyanfar said after a moment. "All right. Put him where you want;
that's crew business, none of mine. Work him. He claims to be a scan
tech. Let him sit watch. Who's on next?" "Ker Hilfy." "With someone of the
experienced crew. Someone who's made their mistakes." Haral grinned and rubbed
the black scar which crossed her nose. "Aye. One of us will sort
him out." "Off with you."
Haral went. Pyanfar slid
down off the counter and transferred the activity to her own board,
sat down in her own deeply padded cushion and ran the incoming
messages of hours past. There was nothing there but what Haral had
said, Tahar's argument about staying and the beginnings of
Starchaser's crisis. Sporadic information still came in: Hasatso sent
word of four survivors. . . . Four. A cold depression
settled over her. Four out of seven crew on
that ship. It was more than the physical body of Starchaser lost out
there, more even than a life or two in a crew kin-close. Four out of
seven was too heavy casualties for a group to recover itself -- not
the way it had once been. Gods, to start over, having lost that
heavily --
"Station," she
sent, "this is Pyanfar Chanur: confirm that transmission from
Hasatso. Names of survivors." "Pride of Chanur,"
station sent back to her, "Hasatso transmit four survivors good
condition. No more information. We relay query." She thanked station
absently, sat staring at the screen a moment. There was lagtime to
contend with on that request, nothing to do but wait. She bestirred
herself to run checks with the ships at repair on their own damages,
to contact station market and to arrange a few purchases and
deliveries via dockside courier services. There was delay on the
communications: everyone at station seemed muddle-witted in the
confusion, down to the jobbers in commodities. "Station, what's
keeping that answer?" she sent main op. "Crew refuse reply,"
the answer came back. Communication failure there too. Nerves.
Possibly shaken-up hani and mahe rescuers were at odds. Ship lost,
cargoes lost, lives lost. An ugly business. And one of the knnn had
put out from station, putting out wailing transmission and wallowing
uncertainly about station's peripheries like a globe of marshfire,
touching off ticking objections/accusations/ pleas? from the tc'a
control. Gods. The oxygen-breather
command went silent for the moment. Tc'a chattered and hissed.
Pyanfar reached for translation output, but it failed: tc'a
translated best when it was simple docking instruction or operations
which were common to all ships. This was something else, gods rot
them. There was silence finally,
even from the tc'a. The knnn moved out farther and stayed there.
Hasatso continued its slow inward progress. At last the mahendo'sat
side of station came on again, quiet operational directions for the
incoming freighter, nothing informational. Pyanfar sent them no
questions. No one did.
The news came when Hasatso
entered final approach: four survivors, a fifth dead in the stress of
the pod eject, of wounds, and allowed to go with the pod when Hasatso
released it, not a hani choice, but mahe honor. Two went with
Starchaser, dead in the attack or unable to get to the pod -- the
information was not clear. There was a name: first officer Hilan
Faha, survivor; and another: Lihan Faha -- the captain, the third
casualty. "Aunt," Hilfy
said, when Pyanfar called her to the bridge and told her, "I'd
like to go down to the dock where they are. I know it's dangerous.
But I'd like to go. By your leave." Pyanfar set her hand on
Hilfy's shoulder. Nodded. "I'll go with you," she said, at
which Hilfy looked both relieved and pleased. "Geran," she
said, turning to lean over the com board, putting it through on
allship. "Geran." The acknowledgment came
back.
"Geran, take watch
again, lowerdeck op. New word's come in. Starchaser captain is lost,
and two of the crew. Hilfy and I are going to meet the rescue ship;
we'll bring the Faha back aboard if they're so inclined. No sense
them having to put up with mahe questions and forms." There was a moment's
delay, a sorrowful acknowledgment. "Come," Pyanfar
said to Hilfy then, and they walked out toward the lift. Hilfy's
bearing was straight enough, her face composed . . . not good news,
when she had gone to sleep thinking that things were better than they
were; but they had something, at least, of the Faha crew, something
saved; and that was still more than they had once hoped. Another matter to the kif
account, when it came to reckonings. But if there were kif out there
now -- and there might be, hovering at the system's edges, the same
game that they themselves had played at Urtur -- then they were
waiting some moment of advantage, some moment when there were not
five armed mahendo'sat patrol ships cruising a pattern out there.
Allship had waked more
than Geran. Tirun was up, sitting in op when they came down toward
the lock; and Geran, who had been assigned the duty; and Chur was
standing about with Tully, who looked vaguely distressed in this
disturbance he likely failed to comprehend. Haral showed up in haste
from farther down the corridor. "Going with you, by your leave,"
Haral said, and Pyanfar nodded, not sorry of it. "Kif out
there," Pyanfar said. "I'm not getting caught twice the
same way." "Take care,"
Tirun wished them as they went, and in the airlock, while Haral
opened the outer hatch, Pyanfar delayed to take the pistol from its
secure place in the locker by com and to slip it into her pocket. "No detectors to
pass," Pyanfar said. "Come on." The hatchway stayed open
behind them; they walked out the ribbed rampway and down onto the
dockside. Engines whined on their left: Moon Rising was still about
her offloading, and canisters were coming off into the hands of
mahendo'sat dockworkers, not hani crew. "They may have gone
to meet the Faha too," Pyanfar judged, marking the total absence
of a hani supervisor outside. It was a courtesy to be expected,
politics aside in a hani-ship's misfortune. "Not much stirring,"
Haral said. That was so. Where
normally the vast docks would have had a busy pedestrian traffic up
and down the vast curve, there was a dearth of casual strollers, and
the activity about Moon Rising was the only activity of any measure
in sight. Dockworkers, service workers, mahe with specific business
underway paused to stare at them and after them as they walked. Stsho
huddled near their accesses and whispered together. The kif were out
about, predictably, clustered together near the accessway of one of
the ships, a mass of black robes, seven, eight of them, who lounged
near their canisters and clicked insults after them. And at one of those
insults Pyanfar's ears flicked, and she stopped the impulse in
mid-twitch, trying to make believe she had not heard or understood.
He knows, hani thief. How many more hani ships will you kill? "Captain -- "
Haral murmured, and Hilfy started to turn around. "Front, gods
-- " Pyanfar hissed and seized Hilfy by the arm. "What do
you want to start, at what odds?" "What do we do?"
Hilfy asked, walking obediently between them. "How can he know?" "Because one of those
kif ships is his, imp; came in here from Kita; and now Akukkakk's
enlisted other ships to help him. They'll scatter out of here like
spores when we go, and gods help us, we're stuck till we get that
repair done." "They as good as hit
Starchaser themselves. I'd like to -- " "We'd all like to,
but we have better sense, Come on." "If they catch us on
the dock -- " "All the more reason
we get the survivors aboard and get off the docks. Afraid you're not
going to get that station liberty here either, imp." "Think I can do
without," Hilfy muttered. They kept walking, down
among the gantries, past idle crews, as far as number fifty-two
berth, where a surplus of bystanders gathered, a dark crowd of
mahendo'sat, sleek-furred, tall bodies which made it difficult to see
anything. Medical personnel were among them; and station officials,
conspicuous by their collars and kilts. And hani, to be sure.
Elbowing through the gathering, Pyanfar caught sight of bronze manes
and a glitter of jewels on a hani ear, and she made for that group
with Haral and Hilfy behind her. . "It's high time you
showed up," Dur Tahar said when she arrived. "Mind yourself,"
Pyanfar said. "My niece behind me is Faha." Dur Tahar slid a glance in
that direction without comment. "Hasatso's due to touch any
moment," she said. "We've got some kif
getting together down the dock. I'd watch that if I were you." "Your problem." "A warning, that's
all." "If you start
something, Chanur, don't look for our help." "Gods rot you, you
give me no encouragement to be civil." "I don't need your
civility." "A mutual hazard,
Tahar." "What, are you asking
favors?" The claws twitched.
"Asking sense, rot you." "I'll think on it." Hasatso touched, a
crashing of locks and grapples. Gantries slid up and crews opened
station ports one after another in response to the ship, connected
lines, started the rampway out to meet the lock. It was an
agonizingly slow process from the spectator ranks, and only the
mahendo'sat found occasion to chatter. And finally a distant
whine and thump announced the breaching of the freighter's hatch,
first in procedure: station reciprocated, and the mahe crew escorted
off four hani, exhausted hani, one with an arm bandaged and bound to
her chest, all of them looking as if they were doing well to be
walking at all. Necessarily the mahendo'sat officials moved in: there
was signing of papers, mahe and hani; and Pyanfar took Hilfy by the
shoulder, worked forward with her. Hilfy went the last on her own and
offered an embrace to the refugees, an embrace wearily returned by
the Faha, one after the other. "My captain,"
Hilfy said then, "my aunt Pyanfar Chanur; my crewmate Haral
Araun par Chanur." There were embraces down
the line. "Our ship is open to you," Pyanfar told the first
officer, whose haggard face and dazed eyes took her in and seemed at
the moment to have too much to take in, with the mahe offering
medical assistance, station wanting immediate statements. Pyanfar
left the Faha momentarily to Hilfy and to the Tahar who had moved up
to offer their own condolences, and herself took the hands of the
mahe rescue crew one after the other, and those of the apparent
captain, a tall hulking fellow who looked as bruised and bewildered
as the Faha, who was probably at the moment reckoning his lost cargo
and the wrath of companies and what comfort all this gratitude was
going to win him when the shouting died down and the bills came in. "You're captain,
mahe?" Pyanfar asked. A sign of the head. "I'm Pyanfar Chanur;
Chanur has filed a report in your behalf at Kirdu; Chanur company
will give you hani status at Anuurn: you come there, understand? Make
runs to Anuurn. No tax." Dark mahe eyes brightened
somewhat. "Good," he said, "good," and squeezed
both her hands in a crushing grip, turned and chattered at his own
folk -- likely one of those mahe who could scarcely understand the
pidgin, and good might be about half his speaking vocabulary. He
seemed to make it clear to the others, who broke out in grins, and
Pyanfar escaped through the crush toward Hilfy and the others, got
her arm about Hilfy and got the whole hani group moving through the
pressure of tall mahendo'sat bodies. The Tahar made a wedge with
them, and they broke into the clear. "This way,"
Pyanfar said, and first officer Hilan Faha took the other elbow of
her injured companion and made sure of the other two, and they
started walking, escaping the officials who called after them about
forms -- Chanur, Faha, and Tahar in one group up the dock, toward the
upcurved horizon where The Pride and Moon Rising were docked. "How far?" the
Faha officer asked in a shaking voice. "Close enough,"
Hilfy assured her. "Take your time." The way back seemed far
longer, slower with the Faha's pace; Pyanfar scanned the dark places
along their route, not the only one watching, she was sure.
Inevitably there were the kif ships; and the kif were there, ten of
them now . . . calling out in mocking clicks their insults and their
invitation to come and ship with them. "We take you to your
port," they howled. "We see you get your reward, hani
thieves." A wild look came into
Hilan Faha's eyes. She stopped dead and turned that stare on them.
"No," Pyanfar said at once. "We're here on station's
tolerance. This isn't our territory. Not on the docks." The kif howled and chirred
their abuse. But the Faha moved, and they made their way farther with
the kif voices fading in the distance, past the stsho, who stared
with large, pale eyes, up past a comforting number of mahendo'sat
vessels, and virtual silence, dock crews and passers-by standing
quietly and watching and respectful sympathy. "Not so much
farther," Pyanfar said. The Faha had not the
breath to answer, only kept walking beside them, and finally, at long
last, they had reached the area of The Pride's berth. "Faha,"
Dur Tahar said then, "Moon Rising has no damage, and The Pride
does. We offer you passage that's assuredly more direct and quicker
home." "We'll accept,"
Hilan Faha said, to Pyanfar's consternation. "Cousin," Hilfy
said in a voice carefully modulated. "Cousin, The Pride will put
out quickly enough; and we need the help. We need you, cousins. You
might find common cause in the company." "Tamun's had all she
can stand," Hilan Faha said, with a protective move of her hand
on her injured comrade's shoulder. She looked toward the Tahar.
"We'll board, by your leave." "Come," Dur
Tahar said, and the Tahar fell about the four and escorted them
across to their own access. Hilfy took a couple of steps forward,
ears flat, stood there, hands fallen to her sides, and took a good
long moment before she turned about again, with her kinswomen
disappearing upward into the rampway of Moon Rising. Mortification
was in every line of her stance, a youngster's humiliation, that set
her down as well as set her aside, and Pyanfar thrust hands into her
waistband to keep them from awkwardness -- no reaching out to the imp
as if she were a child, no comfort to be offered. It was Hilfy's
affair, to take it how she would. "They've had a shock,"
Hilfy said after a moment. "I'm sorry, aunt." "Come on,"
Pyanfar said, nodding toward their rampway. There was a red wash
about her own vision, a slow seething. She was bound to take the
matter as it fell for Hilfy's sake, but it rankled, all the same. She
walked up first and Haral last, leaving Hilfy her silence and her
dignity. Cowards, Pyanfar thought,
and swallowed that thought too for Hilfy's sake. They desperately
needed the added hands: that thought also gnawed at her, less worthy.
They needed the Faha. But the Faha had had enough of kif. And there were kif ships
out there, waiting. She was increasingly certain of it -- if not
actually on the fringes of Kirdu System, which they might be, at
least scattered all about, waiting the moment. More and more kif
ships, a gathering swarm of them, unprecedented in their cooperation
with each other. She passed the airlock
into the corridor, and Chur and Tirun who had turned out with the
evident intention of welcoming their Faha guests -- stopped in their
exit from the op room,
simply stopped. "Our friends changed
their minds," Pyanfar said curtly. "They 1 decided to take
passage with Tahar. Something about an injury a one of them suffered,
and the Tahar promised them a more direct route home." That put at least an
acceptable face on matters for Hilfy's sake. They retreated as
Pyanfar walked into the op room, looked at Geran and Tully who sat
there, Geran having well understood and Tully looking disturbed,
catching the temper in the air, no doubt, but not understanding it.
"Nothing to do with you." Pyanfar said absently, settling
into a chair at the far counter, looking at the system-image which
Geran had been monitoring. Hilfy and Haral came in together, and
there was a strained silence in the op room, all of them gathered
there and Hilfy trying to keep a good face on. "Well, good luck to
them," Tirun muttered. "Gods know they've seen enough." "There are kif out
there on the dock," Pyanfar said, "who know too much.
Getting cheeky about it. They've come in from Kita ahead of us, part
of the bunch from Meetpoint or Urtur -- Urtur, I'll reckon, since I
checked names and they weren't the same as there. Just passing the
message from one kif to the next. It's getting tight here." "There'll be more
soon," Haral said. "I'll bet there's some outsystem.
Captain, think we can talk the mahe to run us escort to our
jumppoint? Surely we've got leverage enough for that." "That story will go
from station to station," Pyanfar said bitterly. "Gods, but
I don't think we've got much choice. Get them to shepherd us out of
here." "When we can get our
tail put together again," Tirun said glumly. There was a noise from
down the hall, a footstep in the airlock. Every head turned for the
doorway and Pyanfar reached for the gun in her pocket and thrust her
way past Tirun getting to the op room door and the corridor, clicking
the safety off the gun. It was hani -- Hilan Faha,
who flung up a startled hand and stopped at the sight of her. Pyanfar
punched the safety back on with a clawtip and thrust the weapon back
into her pocket, aware of others of her crew now behind her. "Changed your mind of
a sudden?" she asked the Faha. "Need to talk to you.
To my young cousin." "To your cousin, rot
you; and to me. Come on inside. Neither she nor I'll talk out here
like dockside peddlers." "Ker Pyanfar,"
the Faha murmured, manners which in no wise mollified her temper.
Pyanfar waved the lot of them back into the op room -- only then
recalled Tully, who was trapped there in the corner, but there was
nothing of secret in his presence on the ship, and no cause to send
him slinking out past them all. Let the Faha talk in front of him;
let her deliver her excuses under an Outsider's stare -- served her
right. And Hilan Faha stopped in
the doorway at the sight of Tully, this naked-skinned creature
hani-styled and hani-dressed sitting at the counter among the crew;
and Hilan's ears went flat. "This," she said, rounding on
Pyanfar, "this is that item the kif wanted -- isn't it?" "His name is Tully." Hilan's mouth tightened,
am ominous furrowing of the nose. "A live item. By the greater
gods, where have you been, Chanur, and what's going on with this
business?" "If you were
traveling on this ship you might ask and I might answer. As things
are, you can learn when the Tahar do." "Rot you, Starchaser
died in your cause, for this -- " She spat, swallowed down a
surplus of words when Pyanfar stared at her sullenly. "It was
the captain's decision; we off-loaded everything at Urtur and tried
to run to give you a break for it. But where were you then? Where was
our help?" "Blind, Hilan Faha --
off in the dust and stark blind. We tried, believe that; but at the
last we had to jump for it or risk collision; we hoped you could get
off in what confusion we created." Hilan drew a quieter
breath. "The captain's decision, not mine. I'd not have budged
out of dock: know that. I'd have sat there and let you sort it out
with the kif, this so-named theft of yours. . . ." "You take kif word
above mine?" "If you have an
explanation I'll be glad to hear it. My cousins are dead. We're
broken. We'll not get another ship, not so likely. Great Chanur makes
plans, but the likes of us -- we'll go on other Faha ships, wherever
we can get a berth. I'll reckon you know where the profit's to be
found, and, gods rot your conniving hide, you've stirred up what a
lot of ships are going to bleed for. What a lot of small companies
are going to go under for. They gave me a message to give you,
Pyanfar Chanur -- the kif gave me this to tell you: that what you've
done is too much to ignore and too great to let pass. That they'll
come after you wherever you are in whatever numbers it takes -- even
to Anuurn. That they'll make it clear to all hani that this prize of
yours is no profit to you. This from their hakkikt. Akukkakk. Him
from Urtur. His words." "Kif threats. I'd
thought you had more nerve." "No empty threats,"
Hilan said, eyes dilated, her nostrils flared and sweat-glistening.
"Tell all hani, this Akukkakk says -- desert this Pyanfar
Chanur or see desolation . . . even to Anuurn space." "And where did you
hear all this? From a scattering of ships and a kif who never caught
us -- who failed to catch you. Hilan Faha; and if we'd gotten
together at Urtur -- " "No. -- No. You don't
understand. They did catch us, Chanur. Did overhaul us. Killed two of
my cousins doing it. At Kita. And they let us go ... but we broke
down in the jump. They let us go to deliver that message." The Faha's shame was
intense. There was a silence in the room, no one seeming to breathe. "So," said
Pyanfar, "do you believe all your enemies say?" "I see this,"
Hilan said, gesturing at Tully. "And all of a sudden the game
looks a lot larger than before. All of a sudden I see reason that the
kif might gather, and why they might not stop. Chanur's ambition --
has gone too far this time. Whatever you're into, I don't want part
of it. My sister's alive; and two of my cousins; and we're going
home. -- Cousin," she said, looking at Hilfy, "to you -- I
apologize." Hilfy said nothing, only
stared with hurt in her eyes. "Hilfy can leave with
you if she likes," Pyanfar said. "Without my blame. It
might be a prudent thing to do ... as you point out." "I'd be pleased to
take her," Hilan said. "I stay with my
ship," Hilfy said, and Pyanfar folded her arms over a stomach
moiling with wishes one way and the other at once. And pride -- that
too. "So," Pyanfar
said, "I wish you safe journey. Best we should travel together,
but I'm sure that's not in the Tahar's mind now." "No. It's not."
The Faha looked down, and up again, in Tully's direction, a darkening
of the eyes. "If you considered your relations to others, you
wouldn't have done this thing. You've taken on too much this time.
And others will think so." "What I took on
myself, arrived on our ship without a by your leave or my knowledge
it existed. What would you do with a refugee who ran onto your ship?
Hand him over to the kif at their asking? I don't sell lives." "But you don't mind
losing them." "You throw away what
they did," Hilfy said suddenly, "with your smallness." The Faha's ears flattened.
"What are you to judge? Talk to me when you've got some years on
you, cousin. This -- " She came dangerously near Tully, and Chur
who had been sitting on a counter slid down to plant both feet,
barring the way. Tully got out of his chair and stood as far back in
the bend of the counter as he could get. The Faha shrugged, a
careless gesture throwing away her intent. "I've another word,"
the Faha said, looking straight at Pyanfar. "Whether or not you
intended what you've involved yourself in -- it just may be the
finish. Your allies might have stood by you, but it's all gotten too
tangled. It's gotten too risky. How long since you've been home?" "Some few months."
Pyanfar drew in a breath and thrust her hands into her belt, with the
taste of something bad coming -- that ill feeling of a house at its
height, in which any breath of change was trouble; and of a sudden
she misliked that look on the Faha's face, that truculence which
melted into something of discomfort, a decent shame. "Maybe more
than that," Pyanfar said, "if you count that I didn't go
downworld last call. What is it, Faha? What is it you're bursting to
tell me?" "A son of yours --
has taken Mahn from Khym Mann. He's neighbor to Chanur now. He has
ambitions. The old Mahn is in exile, and Kohan Chanur is finding
sudden need of all his allies." Hilan Faha shrugged, down-eared
and white about the nose and looking altogether as if she would wish
to be elsewhere at the moment, instead of bringing such news to a
Chanur ship. "My captain would have backed you; but what are we
now, with one of our ships gone, one out of the three Faha owns; and
what do we think when you take on something like this when you
already have as much as Chanur can handle? You've lost your cargo;
you've gotten yourself a feud with the kif, and kif threatening to go
into Anuurn /ones, for the gods' sake -- how can Chanur hold onto its
other allies when that starts? I've lost my ship, my captain, some of
my cousins -- and I have to think of my family. I can't involve
myself with you, not now: I can't make Faha part of this and get our
ships a feud with the kif. You're about to lose everything. Others
will decide the same, and Chanur won't be there even if you get back.
I'm going home, Ker Pyanfar, on the Tahar ship because I have to,
because I'm not tangling what's left of us in Chanur fortunes." "You're young,"
Pyanfar said, looking down her nose. "The young always worry.
You're right, your captain would have backed me. She had the nerve
for it. But go your way, Hilan Faha. I'll pay your debts because I
promised; Chanur will reward the mahe who pulled you out. And when
I've settled with that whelp Kara I'll be in better humor, so I may
even forget this. So you won't worry how to meet me in future --
don't fear too much. I'll not regard you too badly ... the young do
grow; but by the gods I'll never regard you the way I did your
captain. You're not Lihan, Hilan Faha, and maybe you never will be." The Faha fairly shook with
anger. "To be paid the way you paid her -- " "She'd curse me to a
mahe hell if she were here, but she'd not do what you've done. She'd
not run out on a friend. Go on, Hilan Faha, leave my deck. A safe
voyage to you and a quick one." For a moment the Faha
might have struck out; but she was worn thin and hopeless and the
moment and the courage went. "Her curse on you then," she
said, and turned and stalked out, not so straight in the shoulders,
not so high of head as she had come in. Pyanfar scowled and looked at
Hilfy, and Hilfy herself was virtually shaking. "Kohan never said
anything about this Mahn business in his letter," Pyanfar said.
"What do you know, niece?" "I don't," Hilfy
said. "I won't believe it. I think the Faha's been listening to
rumors." "How much did you
know about the estates when you were at home? Where was your head
then, but on The Pride? Is it possible something was brewing and you
didn't hear?" "There was always
talk; Kara Mahn was always hanging about the district. He and Tahy.
There -- was some calling back and forth; I think na Khym talked to
father direct." "Rot his hide, Kohan
could have said something in that letter." "He sent me,"
Hilfy said in a small, stricken voice. "When The Pride turned up
in system I asked to go, and he said he'd never permit it; and then
-- the next night he gave me the letter and put me in the plane and
gods, I was off to the port like that. Hardly a chance to pack. Said
I had to hurry or The Pride would leave port and I'd miss my chance.
Like that, at night; but I thought -- I thought it was because ships
don't calculate day and night, and that shuttle was going up anyway." "O gods,"
Pyanfar groaned, and sat down against the counter, looked up at all
the ring of anxious faces. "Not yet that son of mine doesn't.
Gods blight the kif; we'll settle them, but we're going to take care
of that small business at home; that's first." Ears pricked. "We're
with you," Haral said. "Gods, yes, home. Going to shake me
some scruffs when I get there." "Hai!" Geran
agreed, and Tirun; and Tully visibly flinched, calmed again as Chur
patted his shoulder. He settled and Hilfy sat down beside him, put
her hand on his other shoulder, two disconsolate souls who shared not
much at all but their misery. "We'll straighten it
out," Pyanfar said to Hilfy. "We'll do it on our terms.
Agreed, niece?" "He got me out of
there," Hilfy said. "I could have helped and he saw it
coming and he moved me out." "Huh. You're not old
enough to know your father from my view, with all respect for your
own. He thinks, some time before a problem comes on him -- not much
meditation during, gods know, but he sets things up like pieces on a
board. Too rotted proud to call me downworld, ah, yes; too rotted
smart to have young Hilfy Chanur at hand to get herself in a tangle
with her Mahn cousins and to pitchfork that temper of Kohan's into it
... don't get your ears down at me, imp; we're family here. The sun
rises and sets on your shoulder so far as your father's concerned,
and that blasted son of mine would go right for the greatest
irritance he could give your father if he wanted to take on Chanur --
your precious inexperienced self. No, Kohan just cleared the deck,
that's all. Chances are he was wrong; he's not immune to that either.
I'd sooner have had you there; I think you'd have handled young Kara
right enough; and Tahy with him. But if Moon Rising's going home,
it's to carry the kind of news the Tahar have gotten here; it's going
to make trouble, no thanks to the Faha: and there's a time past which
Kohan's going to be hard put. He's got -- what mates in residence?
Your mother and who?" "Akify and Lilun." "Hope your mother
stands by him," Pyanfar said heavily: the Kihan and the Garas
were ornaments. She walked over to the counter and stared at the scan
a moment. "No matter. Whatever's going on, we'll put it in
order." "Pyanfar -- " Tully's strange voice. She
turned about and looked at him, recalled the pager and turned it on
broadcast, not bothering with the plug. "Question,"
Tully said, and made a vague gesture toward the door where the Faha
had left. "He fight." "She," Pyanfar
said impatiently. "All she." Tully bit his lip and looked
confused. "It's nothing to do with you," Pyanfar said.
"Nothing you'd understand." "I go." he
offered, starting to slide from his place on the counter, but Chur
held his shoulder. "No," Chur said. "It's all right,
Tully. No one's angry at you." "You're not the
cause," Pyanfar said. "Not of this." She walked to the
door, looked back at the crew. "We'll settle it," she said
to the crew, and turned and walked out, down the corridor and alone
toward the lift. Khym overthrown. Dead,
maybe. At the least in exile. The loss of her mate oppressed her to a
surprising degree. Mahn in young Kara's hands would not be what it
had been in Khym's. Khym's style had been easygoing and gracious and
admittedly lazy: he was a comfortable sort of fellow to come back to,
who liked fine things and loved to sit in the shade of his garden and
listen to the tales she could spin of far "ports he would never
see. Boundless curiosity, gentle curiosity. That was Khym Mahn. And
the son he had indulged and pardoned had come back and taken his
garden and his house and his name, while poor Khym -- gods knew where
he was, or in what misery. She rode the lift up to
main level and entered her own quarters, shut the door and sat down
at the desk . . . forbore for a long time to pull out the few
mementoes she bothered to keep, keeping home more in her mind than in
objects. Finally she looked at what she had, a picture, a smooth gray
stone -- odd how pleasant a bit of stone felt, and how alien in this
steel world; stone that conjured the Kahin Hills, the look and the
sound of grass in the wind, and the warmth of the sun and the slick
cold of the rain on the rocks which thrust up out of the grassy
hillsides. Her son . . . cast Khym
out: moved in next to Chanur to threaten Kohan himself, to break
apart all that she had done and built and all that Kohan held. Small
wonder Kohan had wanted Hilfy out of harm's way -- out of a situation
in which tempers could be triggered and reason lost. Put some experience on
her, Kohan had asked. And: Take care of her. She put the things away,
and sat thinking, because while repairs proceeded, there was little
else she could do. They sat here locked into station's embrace and
hoping that the kif stayed off their vulnerable backside. Sat here
while their enemies had time to do what they liked. Strike at Anuurn itself --
Akukkakk could not be so rash. He had not that many ships, that he
could do such a thing. It was bluster, of the sort the kif always
used, hyperbole ... of the sort they always flung out, hoping for
more gains from an enemy's panic than force could win. Unless the
hakkikt was mad ... a definition which, between species, lacked
precision. Unless the hakkikt commanded followers more interested in
damage than in gain. No hakkikt on record had
ever stirred as wide a distance, involving so many ships. No one had
ever done what this one had done, attacking a stsho station,
harassing and threatening an entire starsystem and all its traffic as
he had done at Urtur. She sat and gnawed at her
lip and reckoned that the threat might have substance to it after
all. She checked scan finally, on her own terminal. Nothing showed
but the expected. The knnn still hovered off from station: when she
searched audio the singing came back, placid now and wavering over
three discordant tones. The tc'a were silent, but one, which babbled
static in tones as slow as the knnn's. The prisoner? she wondered.
Lamenting its fate? Beyond those voices there was only normal station
noise, and the close-in chatter of the skimmer crews who had never
ceased their work on The Pride's damage. Normally some of these jump
freighters would have put out: Hasatso's venture out only to meet
emergency had frozen everything. Not even the miners were stirring
out from their berths with the orehaulers and those were snugged into
orbit about Mala or Kilaunan. She patched a call through
to station services, complained about the late delivery on ordered
goods: the courier service issued promises after the time-honored
fashion, and she took them, reckoning on the usual carrier arriving
about the time the rampway was about to close down. Stasteburana-to used
sense, at least; and the patrols stayed out, shuttling the system,
alert against trouble. The mahe kept faith. She expected less of the
Tahar.
IX Moon Rising pulled out in
the off shift, a departure without word to them, in Pyanfar's night.
She ignored it, snarling an incoherency from out the bedclothes to
the com at bedside when she was advised, and pulling the cover back
over herself; it was not worth getting up to see, and she had no
courtesies to pay the Tahar, who deserted another hani to strangers,
crippled as they still sat. She was hardly surprised. Watch had their
standing orders, and there was no need to wake up and deal with it.
Hilfy slept: there was no need to rouse her out for what Hilfy also
expected. Pyanfar burrowed into sleep again and shed the matter from
her mind ... no getting her adrenalin up to rob herself of rest, no
thinking about here, or home, or anything in particular, only maybe
the repairs which were still proceeding, which ought to be virtually
finished by the time she waked, all the panels in place now, and mahe
working out on their tail checking all the sorry little connections
on which their lives relied. The dark took her back.
She snugged down with a feeling of rare luxury.
"Captain. Captain,
hate to disturb you, but we're getting some movement out of the
knnn." She thrust an arm about, felt after the time switch. An
hour and a half from wakeup. She kept moving, swinging her feet out. "Captain." That
was Tirun on watch. "Urgent." "I'm with you. Feed
it here. What's happening?" The screen lit in the
darkened cabin. Pyanfar blinked and rubbed her eyes and focused on
the schematic. Ship markers were blinking in hazard warning, too
close to each other for safety. "Every knnn at dock," Tirun
said. "They're breaking dock and the general direction -- " "After Moon Rising?
Query station. What's going on with them?" "Did, captain;
official no comment." "Rot their hides. Put
me through." It took a moment. Pyanfar
rummaged in the halflight from the screen after her breeches, pulled
them on and jerked the ties. "Station's still
refusing contact, captain: they insist communication by courier
only." Pyanfar tied the knot and
swallowed down a rush of temper. 'My regards to them. What are the
kif doing?" "Sitting still. If
they're talking to each other it's by runner or by line." "Just keep watching
it. I'm awake." She went to the bath, turned on the lights and
washed, walked out again and took a look at the situation on the
screen. Ten ships out of dock now, all chasing out after Moon Rising,
as if that same rotted knnn had gotten utterly muddled which hani was
which and convinced all the others -- ludicrous, absolutely
ludicrous; but humor failed her -- there had been misunderstandings
in the old days, before stsho had gotten the idea of the Compact
across to the tc'a, and the tc'a in turn had gotten the knnn and chi
to comprehend Compact civilization . . . enough to come and go in it
without trouble; to trade with it; to avoid collisions and
provocations and sometimes to cooperate. The methane-breathers were
dangerous when stirred. She frowned over the image, combed, cut off
the com and headed out down the corridor for the lift. "No change?" she
asked when she walked in on Tirun in op. "No change,"
Tirun said. Her injured leg was not propped, though thrust out at an
angle as she leaned to tap the screen. "They're all in a string,
all ten of them, all after the Tahar." "Gods," Pyanfar
muttered. "A mess." "They've got id
signals -- they have to know that's not us." Pyanfar shrugged
helplessly. She walked back to the door. "I'm going to get the
others. About time for you to go off, isn't it?" "Half an hour." "Who's up next?" "Haral." "So we start early."
Pyanfar walked out and down the corridor toward the large cabin that
was in-dock crew quarters, pushed the bar to open the door and
inside, the one that started dawn-cycle on the lights. "Up. Got
a little disturbance. Knnn have gone berserk. I don't want us abed if
they come this way." There was a general
stirring of blanketed bodies in the half-light, on a row of bunks
under the protective netting of the overhead; bunks and cots -- Tully
was at the left, curtained off, but not from her vantage, a tousled
head and bewildered stare from among the blankets -- and Hilfy . . .
Hilfy was on the other side of the room, stirring out with the rest,
naked as the rest, as Tully, who was getting out of bed on his side
of the curtain. Gods. Anger coursed her nerves, a distaste for this
upset in order which had swept The Pride. They voyaged celibate. In
her mind she could hear Tahar gossip -- something else that would be
told on Anuurn. And gods, she could see the look in Kohan's eyes. She
scowled. "Hilfy. Breakfast on watch, half an hour. Move!" "Aunt." Hilfy
stood up and jerked up her breeches with dispatch. Pyanfar stalked out,
headed back to the op room, shook off her distaste in self-reproach.
So Hilfy had resigned the privilege of guest quarters and snugged in
with the crew; she guessed why -- with the parting of ways with the
Faha. And the crew had invited: that was territory in which the
invitation came from inside and she did not intervene. In their eyes, I hen, Hilfy belonged. As they had taken Tully
in. Gods. Her nape prickled. "Breakfast and relief
is coming," she told Tirun as she arrived. "No change,"
Tirun said. "Same courses, all involved. Not a move from the
kif, not a word." "Huh." Pyanfar
sat down sideways on the counter. "Confused likewise. I hope." "They couldn't be in
communication with them." Tirun turned a disquieted stare toward
her. "I'm out of the
assumption market." The rout progressed, Moon
Rising proceeding outsystem with ii mahe escort at great distance and
a manic flood of knnn behind. "They're mad,"
Tirun said. Pyanfar sat and watched,
glaring at the screen. Haral arrived, with Hilfy
and breakfast; the others showed up hard on their heels, a
procession, Geran and Chur and Tully carrying their own trays.
"What's going on out there?" Haral asked. "Tahar," Tirun
said, "leading every scatterwitted knnn at the station -- " The screen had changed,
the dots parting on the scan, that which was Tahar going on, the
knnn. . . . "They're stopping,"
Hilfy said. "Wonderful,"
Pyanfar muttered, took up her cup of gfi and sipped it, watching as
the gap widened. Turnover eventually, she reckoned; the knnn
developed other plans. Tully spoke, a flood of alien babble, but she
had left the pager in her cabin. Chur turned hers to broadcast.
"Enemy ship," it rendered. "Knnn," Haral
said. "Not an enemy. Neutral. But trouble. That's Moon Rising.
The knnn followed them; now they've quit." "Why?" "Don't know, Tully." Moon Rising made jump, a
sudden wink off station scan -- knnnless. "Gods," Hilfy
exclaimed, as the knnn bent a turn. "Knnn maneuver,"
Tirun said. "The bastards are showing out. They can jump boost
and turn like that. It'd kill a hani. Any oxygen breather. Can't
outmaneuver them. Gods forbid, if we should have to shoot at one --
comp plotting can't hit one: not programmed for their moves." "They don't shoot at
us. They aren't armed." "In the old days,"
Haral said, "they never caught the knnn shooting either. But
ships turned up gutted. Before my time. But I heard they'd swarm a
ship, jump it elsewhere -- haul its mass off where they'd open it at
their leisure -- " "Haul it between
them?" Hilfy's face mirrored disbelief. "Among them. A dozen.
All synched. So I heard. Hani ships'd tear each other to junk; but
knnn can synch like that." "Huh," Pyanfar
said. It was an old bunk yarn, like ghost ships. Like aliens outside
the Compact. She stared at Tully and thought about that. Ate her
dried chips and washed it down with gfi. On com, station sent
instructions to its patrol to stay out of the way of the knnn. A tc'a
went on, presumably talking to the knnn. And a message light
blinked on their own board, something directed at them. Revise estimate, the
letters crept across the screen when Tirun keyed it. 75 hours repair
additional. Regret. Mahe more worker this job. Two team. Repeat ... "Gods help us."
Pyanfar snatched the mike and punched in station op. "What kind
of trouble this? What fifteen hours? Fifteen more hours?" Station routed the
complaint, one to the next, to the almost incomprehensible mahe
skimmer supervisor. "All skimmer station work," was the
answer, three times repeated, in rising volume, as if loudness
improved communication. "Thanks," Pyanfar muttered. "Out."
She ran a hand through her mane, put the mike down, looked around at
staring eyes and managed a better face. "Well," Haral
said in a quiet voice, "at least they found it before they sent
us out with it." "I'll go out the aft
lock," Geran said, "and check them out on it." "No," Pyanfar
said. "I don't doubt you'll find damage. Longshot it from the
observation dome. And by the gods, if there's something new I want to
know about it." She composed herself a moment. "No, gods
rot them, the mahe'd gouge us on fines and charges, but if I've got
the measure of that foreman she's not the type. Still... Do the check
anyhow." "Right." Geran
snatched up the tray and headed out, down the corridor for the bubble
access, a cold trip to the frame. Pyanfar thought of going herself,
delayed to finish her breakfast and watched the knnn, who had stopped
again, hovering off in utter violation of lanes and regulations.
Station operations reported a ship coming in, a mahendo'sat freighter
arriving in the zenith range: they had their own problems. So did the
mahen freighter, coming in to what should be a safe haven and finding
traffic snugged down and knnn gone berserk. "I'm going to main,"
she said finally. "Go off down here. Rest. Haral, I'll take it,
up there. I'll key you." "Captain -- "
Haral started to object, swallowed it, having a sense about such
things. "Right." Pyanfar walked out,
hitched up the trousers which had gotten too loose in recent days,
headed for the lift. Go in person to station offices and take the
place apart? It tempted. At the moment she wanted something breakable
within reach. But it would hardly mend matters. Fifteen hours. It was
hardly surprising; repairs for all of time and to all ends of the
Compact ran behind schedule and over estimate. And then it was
sixteen and seventeen and another twenty --
She took the lift up,
ensconced herself in her cushion on the bridge and sent rapid inquiry
through all appropriate channels. Defect vane yoke, the answer came
back from the station office, and hard upon that, from Geran: "Got
closeup; they've swarmed in on the vane collar, but I can't tell
much." The image came through, two skimmers and three workers in
eva-I pods grappled onto the afflicted vane where it attached to the
strut, cables and vane and strut strung with red hazard lights to
prevent accidents in shadow. It was a plausible repair, gods --
nothing cheap; the damage that had blown the panels loose could have
stressed it ... one of those systems for which there was no bypass,
through which a third of the power of the jump drive passed. "Yoke,"
Pyanfar sent to Geran, who was likely shivering her teeth loose in
the bubble. "Come on inship; there's no more we can do." It was a fifteen hour job.
A gnawing suspicion worked at her gut. The defect should have shown
up on the board: there were reasons why it might not -- that it had
blown as they camel in ... something had redlighted, so many things
had redlighted at one instant and gone back to normal status .
possibly, possibly it was real. Possibly too it was one of those
demon touches, the mahendo'sat called them, that lost ships,
something loose that contacted in stresses and killed. It was five to
five they owed the mahendo'sat crew profound thanks; or they were
being stalled, conned, set up. Check it now and ill was bound to
redlight: the casing was off. She sat staring at the vid screen with
her blood pressure up and a smoldering] rage with nowhere to send it. "Haral," she
said into com. "Captain?" "That problem you
fixed as we were coming in. Was the number one yoke involved? Could
you tell?" A long moment of silence.
"Captain, we were losing the input; I put in a new board and we
got it cleared. But that fade had stressed everything; the whole
board was fouled. I couldn't say beyond doubt. It was everywhere. I
thought it was the panels. I'm sorry, captain." There was misery in
Haral's voice. Haral was not accustomed to be wrong. Ever. "It's
one of those things," Pyanfar said, "that would redlight if
the panels were overloaded; I'm not so sure you were wrong, Haral.
I'm not at all sure you were wrong." "I'll go out there,"
Haral said. "And do what? They've
got it in a mess it takes skimmers to put back. Mahen skimmers. No.
We sit it out."
"Supplies arriving,"
Chur informed her eventually via com from belowdecks. That was frozen
fish off Kirdu IIs onworld ponds; and some stsho goods for Tully and
some more translator tapes. She checked the time; after their
originally scheduled departure. The courier service had been informed
of the delay as quickly as they had been, which insolence sent her
blood pressure up another several points. "Captain?" Chur
asked. "Noted," Pyanfar said coldly, and Chur broke the
contact.
Another hour. The vid
showed continual activity about the vane. Pyanfar diverted herself
into board maintenance, burrowed into under-console spaces, checked
and rechecked, surfaced now and again to dart a jaundiced look at the
vid or to listen to some communication coming in. The station was
getting back to normal; only the knnn . . . stayed out, fell into
systemic drift, wailing still to each other. The lift down the corridor
hummed and opened doors: Pyanfar heard that and worked her way out of
a finished job, stood up and wiped her hands and straightened her
mane -- soft quick footfalls in the corridor. "Aunt?" She sat down on the
armrest of her own cushion, scowled at her niece. Hilfy stood in the
archway with a paper in her hand, came and offered it. "Just
came. Couriered. Security seal." Pyanfar snatched it,
hooked a claw in it, ripped it open, nose wrinkling. Stasteburana's
signature. Greetings, respects, and the assurance all possible was
being done. "The stationmaster's compliments," Pyanfar
translated sourly. "We get escort to our jump point when we go;
departure's firm for that fifteenth hour. Rot them, they knew about
this, or they'd have been here asking for that tape. They want it, to
be sure -- before the job's sealed off. Is the courier waiting?" "No." "Rot them all." "Tully's tape, you
mean." She looked up at Hilfy,
whose adolescent-bearded held a hint of a frown. "Is that a
comment?" "No, aunt." "I told the Outsider
why." "Tully, aunt." Pyanfar sucked in a
breath. "Tully, if you please. I told him why. Did I get
through?" "He -- talked to Chur
about it." "What did he say?" "That he understood." "And the rest of
you?" Hilfy tucked her hands
behind under her brow. "He senses much trouble's going on. Last
offshift, he tried to talk to all of us, gods, how he tried. Finally
-- " Her ears went down, a second glance at the deck. "Finally
he put his arms around Chur and then he went j from one to the next
of us all and did the same, not -- male-female, not like that. Just
like he had something to say and he' didn't have any other way to say
it." Pyanfar said nothing, jaw
set. "He's started another
tape," Hilfy said. "The new manual." "Is he?" , "We gave it to him;
he sat down with it in op and he's feeding the words in as fast as he
can go." Pyanfar frowned, taken
aback. "He liked the stsho
shirts you came up with too. Warm, says, never mind the fancywork." "Huh." Pyanfar
thrust herself to her feet, poked an extended claw at Hilfy. "Nice
fellow, this Tully, so understanding and grateful and all. I've been
back and forth this route a few voyages, imp, and I've seen my share
of con artists. In the1 first place, since we bring it up, I don't
like the Outsider bedding down with the lot of you. I permitted it in
a moment of soft-headedness, because I didn't like his moping about
and I didn't want himself killing himself the way, mark you, imp, the
way he admits to killing a companion of his -- for friendship's
sake." "It's not fair to say
that. It was brave, what he did." "Granted. And maybe
he's got a few more brave notions. The crew's used to alien ways and
I figured they'd keep their judgment, but I don't like you down
there. Gods know you've earned the right to be down there -- that's
where I'd rather you were, all things equal, but they aren't; there's
that rotted Outsider in the company, and he makes me nervous, niece,
the way things make me nervous that just may blow up without warning.
I don't like you near him." Hilfy's ears were
plastered flat to her skull. "Pardon, aunt. If you order me to
go back to my quarters, I will." "No," Pyanfar
said. "I'll do you one worse. I'll rely on your sense. I'll just
tell you to think what gets blown to ruin if some triviality sets our
guest off at the wrong moment. Chanur, niece. You understand that?" The ears came up. Hilfy's
nose wrinkled all the same, the shot gone home. "I know I want
to get back to Anuurn, aunt; but I know too that I want to be proud
of one side of the family when I get there." Pyanfar raised her hand --
got that far with it, and stopped the blow and turned it into a
gesture of dismissal. "Out, imp. Out." Hilfy turned on her heel
and went. Pyanfar slid into the cushion and crumpled the
stationmaster's message with the other hand, punched claws through
it. Gods rot it, to have leaned on the youngster in that matter . . .
and to no point: to no point; underway, they would be back to wider
spaces, to -- gods knew what they would be up against. She reached and keyed
through the translator channel, heard Tully's steady input, jabbed it
out again. After a moment she shook
her head, smoothed out the paper and filed it in fax. Punched the
translator key on again and listened to Tully, a quiet, familiar
voice, putting word after word into memory.
Six hours; nine; twelve;
thirteen. The day passed in meals-at-station, in checks and
counterchecks; in enforced rest and secure-for-jump procedures and
most of all in monitoring scan and com. Pyanfar reached the stage of
pacing and fretting by the twelfth hour, fed and napped beyond
endurance -- wore off claw-tips on the flooring and disguised the
anxiety when any of the crew came near on errands. But Hilfy managed not to
come. Stayed below, in what frame of mind or what understanding
Pyanfar could not find a way to ask. "Courier's here."
Chur's voice cracked out of the silence on the bridge, com from
lowerdeck. "Asking the tape, captain.' "Ask the courier,"
Pyanfar said, "the finish time on the repair." A delay. "The courier says
within the hour, captain." "Understood."
Pyanfar caught her breath, looked left when she had laid the tape she
had prepared, reached and pocketed the cassette and headed out for
the lift, in such a fever that it was not till she had started the
lift downward that she had thought again what it was she went down to
trade: away from this place was all the thought; and the tape was a
means to get free; and the shedding of the whole ugly necessity
something she was only too glad to have done, to get The Pride free
o: mahendo'sat and loose and on her way. But Hilfy was down there.
That recollection hit her. The lift stopped, the door opened, and she
hesitated half a heartbeat in walking out, sucked up a breath she
wanted all too much to spend on the mahe for the delay, and strode
out quite bereft of the breath and the anger she wanted to loose. Tully. Ye gods, Tully was
in op too, off the corridor where any visitor to the ship not
confined to the airlock would be brought as a matter of course. She rounded the corner and
found a gathering indeed -- a dignified-looking mahe in a jeweled
collar and kilt; a mahe attendant; Haral, Tirun, and Hilfy. She
walked into the group suddenly conscious of her own informal attire,
scowled and drew herself up to all her stature -- none too tall in
mahendo'sat reckoning. "Bad mess," the
ranking mahe spat at her. "Big trouble you cause, hani. All same
we fix ship." The Voice of the
stationmaster, primed with accusations and bluster. The Voice looked
her up and down, with grand hauteur. Jeweled and perfumed. Pyanfar
flexed her claws, pointedly and with grander coolness turned her
shoulder and looked toward her own. "Tully. Where's Tully? Is he
still in op?" "You endanger the
station," the Voice railed on her dutifully. "Big trouble
with tc'a; knnn bastard kidnap and extortion. You want take with you
the eva-pod the knnn bring for trade for good tc'a citizen, hah? Got
your name on it, hani Pride of Chanur, clear letters." "Tully! Get your
rotted self out here. Now!" "They don't come into
station now, the knnn, no, make navigation hazard all this system.
All disturb. Mining stop. Trade stop. All business stand dead still.
You use knnn signal, a? Upset the knnn; take kif property, upset the
kif; get tc'a kidnap, tc'a upset; get fight stsho station, stsho make
charge; hani don't speak to you; -- what for we deal with you, hani,
a?" Tully came out of the op
room, Chur attending him. He had on his new stsho-made shirt, white
silk and blue borders -- looked immaculately civilized and no little
upset in the shouting. "The papers, Tully," Pyanfar said.
"Show them to this kind mahe." He fished in his pocket
for the folder, pale eyes anxious. "I got no need cursed
papers," the Voice snapped. Tully had them all the same, held
them open in front of the mahe, who waved them aside. "You issued them,"
Pyanfar said. "Property of the kif. Property of the kif, you
say. You look at this fine, this honest, this documented member of an
intelligent and civilized space-faring species and you talk about him
with words like property of the kif? I call down shame on you; I ask
you explain to him, you, in your own words, explain this property." The Voice flattened her
ears, looked aside at her attendant, who proffered a scent bottle. In
elaborate indirection the Voice unstopped it and inhaled,
recollecting herself in retreat. Her face when next she looked down
at them was tolerably mild. "The tapes," the
Voice said. "The tapes you make deal cover some damage." "All the damages. No
fines. No charges. No complaints." ' 'Starchaser rescue." "A separate matter.
Chanur and Faha together will stand good for it when we reach home.
As for the captain of the rescue ship, he has my guarantee, which is
worth more than his losses. It's settled." The Voice considered a
moment, nodded. "The tape," she said, holding out her hand.
"This give, repair finish. Give you safe escort. Fair deal,
Chanur." Pyanfar took it from her
pocket, an uncommon warmth about her ears -- looked aside at Tully.
She thrust it at him. "You give it. Yours." Hilfy opened her mouth to
say something, and shut it. Tully looked down at the cassette, looked
up at the Voice and hesitantly handed the tape toward her. "Friend,"
he said in the hani tongue. "Friend to mahe." The dark-furred hand
closed on the cassette. The Voice laid back her ears and pursed her
mouth in thoughtful consideration. Tully still had his hand out --
his own kind of gesture, who was always touching; kept it out. Slowly
the mahe reached out, alien protocol being her calling, and gamely
suffered Tully to clasp her hand, took it back without visible
flinching ... but with a subdued quiet unlike herself. She bowed her
head that slightest degree of courtesy. "I carry your word,"
she said. And with a scowl and a
glance at Pyanfar: "Undock one hour, firm. Kirdu Station give
you all possible help. Urge you give us location of this good fellow
homeworld -- danger to lose you, him, all, this trip." "Beyond the kif is
the location we presently suspect. Haven't had the time to learn,
honorable." "Stupid," the
Voice said with her professional license. "Our unfortunate
friend was dragged through miserable circumstances with the kif;
hurt; not stupid -- too wise to talk without understanding. Now
there's too little time. You help us get out of here and we'll settle
the kif sooner or later." "This hakkikt. . . .
Akukkakk. We know this one. Bad trouble, Chanur captain." "What do you know?"
Pyanfar asked, suddenly and not for the first time suspicious of
every mahe .at Kirdu. "What do you know about this kif?" "You undock one hour.
Skimmers go now. You make good quick voyage, Chanur captain." "What do you know
about the kif?" "Good voyage,"
the Voice pronounced, and bowed once and generally, collected her
attendant and walked for the airlock. "Hai," Pyanfar
said in vexation, and with a wave of her hand sent Haral striding
after the Voice and her companion. She looked about at Hilfy, whose
ears were somewhat down; and at Tirun and Chur and Tully. Tully
looked disquieted. "Good," Pyanfar said to him, clapping
him on the arm. "Good touch, that 'friend.' You laid the burden
on her, you know that? That's the Voice that speaks to and for the
Personage himself, the stationmaster of Kirdu; and by the gods you
did it, my clever, my mannerly Outsider, you threw that one right in
the stationmaster's lap." Tully glanced down, made a
small shrug, no less troubled-looking. She was not wearing the
translator plug. "An hour, hear?" she said to the others,
to Tirun and Hilfy and Chur -- and Geran, who would be keeping watch
in the op room with strangers running in and out of the ship: no way
it was unattended. "An hour and we're underway, out of here.
Home." "How are we doing it?" Geran called from out of
the room. "Stringing the jumps like before?" "Close as we can cut
it," Pyanfar said, and looked left as movement caught her eye,
Haral's return from the lock, as far as the beginning of the
corridor. "Seal us up,
captain?" Haral shouted down the corridor. "Seal us up,"
Pyanfar confirmed, and stopped in mid-wave as a tall dark figure
appeared in the corridor behind Haral "Ware!" Mahendo'sat. Haral had
already spun about, and the lanky, dark-furred mahe walked on in as
if he belonged, flashing a gilt-edged grin. "Ismehanan -- "
Pyanfar shouted. " -- Goldtooth, gods rot you, slinking into my
corridors without a by your leave -- Who let you in?" The grin in no wise
diminished. The mahe gave a sweeping bow and straightened as she
strode up to him. "Got sudden business, Chanur, maybe same you
course." "Whose business?" "Maybe same you
business." She swelled up with a
breath and looked up at him, hands in the back of her waistband.
"Maybe you talk straight, captain. Once." "Where you go?" "Maybe I should
broadcast it on the dock. For the kif." "Home, maybe? Ajir
route?" "Guess as you like." "Got Mahijiru weapons
first rate; friend mine make port today, also got number-one rig.
Wait over, Chanur." "Bastard!" He stepped back, held a
hand up, blunt-nailed; hers, lifted, was not. He grinned with the
fending gesture. "Necessity, time mahe shed cargo." "You egg-sucking
liars. Where I'm going has nothing to do with you; hani business, you
hear that? Private business. You want a quarrel with the kif you go
find your own." "Go home, do you?" "Private business,
I'm telling you." "Warn you,"
Goldtooth said. "Once. Maybe now go make deal hani port; lots
trade. You talk for your good friend there, yes?" "Goldtooth, what game
are you playing?" He grinned and turned on
his heel, walked off toward the lock, where Haral stood in scowling
indignation. "Goldtooth!" He paused to wave.
"Mahijiru you escort, captain. You got number one best." "Rot your hide, I'm
not playing decoy in some mahen game with the kif!" He was gone while the
echoes were still ringing. Haral, lacking orders, looked back at her,
and Pyanfar slung her arms to her sides, not reckoning on giving any.
It was the mahe's terms and there was nothing they could do to stop
him from following. "Seal that lock," she said. "Gods
know what else might get in." Haral went on the run. Pyanfar
looked about at the others, at Tully, and Chur and Hilfy and Tirun;
and Geran, who had stepped out of op. "Mahijiru's on,"
Geran said. "Someone's just hooked up a shielded line and we're
getting transmission. They claim they've got orders and they're
asking data." "We're going home,"
Pyanfar said shortly. "Home, by the gods. They've cost us time.
If Stasteburana's got notions of using us, rot him, two can play that
game. I'll give them our course; I'll give them a leadin inside the
Anuurn perimeter." "Chanur -- "
Tirun objected quietly. "More than Chanur's
got a stake in this. Maybe Anuurn needs to see that. We've got
ourselves trouble. Widespread trouble. We don't know how far it
stretches. There ought to be hani here, do you mark that? Lots of
hani ships coming and going here, not just Tahar. Here we are at one
of the prime stops on our rivals' route . . . and no hani ships but
that one. Homebound. I'll lay you odds, cousins, they've been staying
home when they've come to port. That's what's vacated the track we've
been on. Starchaser knew; word's been passing, at every port, every
contact." "Aye," Chur
murmured. "Aye. Gods. Six months they could have had at this --
" "I'm going to the
bridge. Bridge crew this passage -- Haral; Geran; Chur. The rest of
you take op station; and get Tully his sedative, now, before someone
forgets." "Aunt!" Hilfy
called after her. Pyanfar stopped and turned. "Captain,"
Hilfy said in a quieter voice. "Question?"
Pyanfar asked, scowling. Hilfy's chin went up. "No, captain, "
Hilfy said quite steadily. Pyanfar nodded, with a small tightening of
the mouth, looked satisfaction into Hilfy's clear eyes, then turned
again and strode off to the lift. Down the corridor, the
lock boomed shut. The Pride had begun her separation.
X "Getting pickup on
the companion," Chur said, snugged in com station. "They
swear it's a secure line." "Huh." Pyanfar
finished up the checks and reached for the contact flashing on her
com module. "Chanur here." "Introduce you,"
Goldtooth's voice came back to her. "Captain Pyanfar Chanur, got
link to Aja Jin. Captain Nomesteturjai." "Chanur," a
voice rumbled back. "Name Jik, here." "Number one fellow,
Jik," Goldtooth said. "Honest same you, Pyanfar Chanur." "Honest like stall me
off; like delay me. Chanur's fighting for its life, you rag-eared
bastard, does that get through your head? Challenge; and I'm not
there. In your spying about, do you know what that means?" "Ah," Goldtooth
said. "Know this trouble. Yes." Pyanfar said nothing,
forced the claws back in. "Know where this
Akukkakk too," Goldtooth said. "Interested, hani captain?" "After I've settled
my own business." "Same place." "Anuurn?" "Keep you alive,
hani. We make slow maybe, but you make deal we want. More big than
pearls and welders, a, hani?" "You follow, rot
you." She keyed through the course and the graph on comp.
"There's the way." A mahen hiss came back,
throaty and rueful. "You steer by luck, hani? You crazy mad,
that course?" "Do it all the time,
mahe. Scare you?" "Hani joke, a?" "Got two kif docked
down there. We go, they'll go. You got that patrol alerted?" "Got," came that
second voice. "Ha," Pyanfar
muttered. "You got your data; got all you want. Enough. We're
getting out of here." "A." Assent. Pyanfar flung a
glance toward Haral, across the separating console, and the contact
went out. Chur flicked signals to the dock crew. "Got us
prioritied out," Chur reported. "No problem." The
lines were coming loose. Telltales began to flash, wanting ports
sealed. Haral put the seals in function, straight down the sequence.
Screens in front of number one post livened, Geran routing through
the station scan image. The airlock grapple clanged into unlock, and
the last of the seal-ports was firm. "Moving out," Pyanfar
warned over allship, and cleared The Pride's own grapples, her grip
on station independent of the station's grip on her: those boomed
into the housing, and undocking jets eased them clear. It was a smooth parting,
an easy push clear and a nosing toward an untrafficked nadir as g
started up, a whine of the rotational engines. Comp flashed them
their lane, and scan showed Mahijiru and Aja Jin moving down below
the station rim off portside. The Pride gathered momentum, a solid g
and a half now, outbound. "Kif are breaking
free," Chur said, com monitor. "Station advises." "No scan
confirmation," Geran said. Pyanfar was already
reaching for the shielded weapons switch, uncapped it and flicked it
on: a ripple of lights advised the gunports were clearing. "Stay
on that," she told Haral without taking her eyes off her own
business. "No comp synch, not with the mahe in the way. Can't be
taking one of them by mistake." "Hope they're as
considerate," Haral muttered. "Huh." "Kif are moving out,"
Geran said. "Number two screen." "Where's our escort?"
Pyanfar wondered glumly. " -- Op deck, stay braced. Listen in
and take your cues." "Escort moving,"
Chur said. "They're on intercept; station's got them
scan-blanked." "Understood."
She darted a look at station-sent scan, on which they themselves
showed as an oversized wedge, massed blip of ships in synch. Geran
sent another image. G continued, dragging at the gut, straining her
arm back against the elbow brace. The kif were not gaining, were
maintaining a sedate acceleration in their wake. Goldtooth and this
stranger Jik: escort. She did not, she admitted to herself,
understand the mahen order of things, no more than outsiders
understood the stsho. Trading with them was one thing. Figuring out
the limits of a mahe like Stasteburana was another. Goldtooth and
this mahe friend of his, this ship which had come kiting into system
in the hour of Tahar's exit -- merchanters, maybe; but what she saw
of Mahijiru and Aja Jin on vid was ominously lean, ominously trim
with their cargo holds stripped off; a lot of space given to the
power assembly on those two, a profligate lot of jump capacity masked
by those missing holds, odd-shaped cores swelling in such fashion
that they would cut into any reasonable geometry of tanks which had
been strapped on. Vanes with strange dark interstices, like folding
joints, vanes larger than ships of their mass ought to carry. It was
a curious thing, that ships never saw "ach other; that they
nosed up to station and stayed invisible behind station walls; that
they existed as blips and dots and figures in comp, moving too fast
for vid to pick up. Only now that they were in synch, a package
moving at the same velocity and in sight of each other --
"Runner ships,"
Pyanfar muttered to Haral. "Look at our escort, cousin." "Got that,"
Haral said quietly. "Got that, Captain." Something new among the
mahendo'sat. Something which had to have been very quiet for a long
time. Ships like the kif runners. Hunter ships. Her mustache-hairs
drew taut as if her nose had picked up something. Gods: Mahijiru, out
prowling about Meetpoint, out on the fringes of stsho space --
Hunting rumors? A crew
lounging on the dock, loud and visible with repair they could have
done inside as well. Two sets of hunters on the docks besides the kif
themselves, and they had come sniffing round each other, each so
cleverly assaying the other, she and the mahe --
"That goldtoothed
bastard knew something," Pyanfar said. "From the very start
he knew. Knew this Akukkakk; knew those kif ships; knew what was
stirring out here." Haral shot her a
disquieted look. "Knnn," Geran
said suddenly; and vid went off and another image came in, sectorized
on the mass of knnn ships, which were no longer stationary. "Gods," Chur
muttered, "here we go." "Never mind the
rotted knnn," Pyanfar said. "Watch the kif; op, take that
sectorized image and keep us posted." It vanished from her
screen; Tirun acknowledged recept below. Behind them, on the image
which turned up, the kif started now to move. "Got us knnn,"
Goldtooth's voice cut in, transferred from Chur's board. "Nuisance,"
Pyanfar said. "You know more than that, mahe? What more do you
know? About how you were hunting trouble at Meetpoint?" "Got no need hunt.
Hani in port." "Captain."
Tirun's voice. "Decreased interval." She was watching it.
Flexed her claws carefully on the togglegrip. "Moving out,"
she told the mahe. "Going to boost up and test; clear my field,
understand? No more time here." "A." She moved the control. The
Pride kicked up to widen the interval between herself and the mahe.
The number one screen flicked from scan to a bracketed star; the
images shifted one screen over and dumped the vid entirely. On scan
the kif fell farther and farther behind, chancing nothing with the
patrol. And the knnn -- the knnn
streamed along in a manic flood, accelerating as they went, a few
points off their course. "Interval achieved,"
Haral said. "Boosting up,"
Pyanfar warned the others. She hit the jump pulse, lightly, swallowed
against the queasiness and saw the instruments sorting themselves out
at the new velocity. "Clear," Haral
said. "All stable. Coming up on jump." "Stand by the long
one," Pyanfar advised the crew below. Cast a last and frantic
look at scan, where Mahijiru and Aja Jin had fallen behind on
estimated-position. No communication possible now: they were too much
lag apart. It was the position she wanted, the mahe running at their
tail: their nose they could take care of themselves. Best to flare
through any ambush where they were going and not be the second or
third ship in, as Starchaser had been at Kita, after the nest had
been stirred and the kif wakened. Luck, she wished the mahe.
In spite of other things. In spite of deceits; in spite of mahen
purposes which had nothing to do with hers. Luck, she thought; and:
conniving liar. The course was flashing on
the screen, a jump first for Ajir System, and through it to
Anuurn itself, the straightest course and the most vulnerable to
ambush; but they were out of time for finesse. "Ready," she
warned the crew. They reached their point.
Mahijiru would be after them, gliding on their tail; and Aja Jin,
that other of Goldtooth's ilk. ...
... all the way. A wail from com as they
came up, a buoy, Ajir marker dopplered into nonsense.
Mahendo'sat/hani cooperative, this station, full of traffic and
hazards in the jump range for a lunatic chase to come streaking
through, velocity unchecked: a second time to try the maneuver that
had failed at Kita, had failed, with damage to the ship. Gods help
any other incomer who chanced to be in the way. ALERTALERTALERT, The Pride
wailed, capsuled transmission: mahe escort behind. Likely hostile
action. Beware of kif insystem and out. Launch all system defense.
Take precaution. Two ships following us are escort. Next is trouble.
Casualties in previous attacks: Handur's Voyager; Faha's Starchaser.
Kif attack on non-Compact unarmed ship, three alien casualties.
ALERTALERTALERT. . . . Chaos would break loose at
Ajir: kif at dock might take exception to it; Handur might be here to
hear it; and Faha. If the kif were not
waiting here, in ambush already. . .
The mass that was Ajir, a
yellow sun, loomed ahead: Ajir, askew from most stars of the region,
wearing its belt of worlds and debris rakishly aslant -- hazard,
Pyanfar's memory kept warning her, distant and fogged in the muddle
of postjump, of extreme velocities and instruments feeding them only
the skim of reality, too fast, too fast. . . . "Where is it?"
she asked of Haral -- for the gods' sakes, homestar ... a blind
newborn could sense it from Ajir, could feel it, head for it however
shaken in jump: their bow was toward it. "Locked on,"
Haral's slow voice purred through the madness, slow, when they were
pushing c and the system was whipping past in unreality, moving while
they drifted through movements: one dopplered star was clear for
them, zeroed in the brackets, and all the rest had gone mad. . . . Home.
Weeks, in the time/notime
of jump. ... They were in. Hard to
think, to begin the dump sequences. The ship would take over when
manual intervention failed utterly; would dump velocity and glide
them to an outsystem halt, still within return range. Easier to let
it slide, let the system blur past, let the machinery take over --
No. They were on manual
override from the last one. Machine-rules were already violated.
Pyanfar lifted the arm, saw with her dazed vision Haral, who had
begun the same desperate struggle, slow and sickly in the aftermath
of their arrival. A warning light was blinking, not the same
malfunction, but outside alert: com recept -- beacon- They dumped down and went
totally blind for an instant. Anuurn beacon welcomed them out of it;
their own alert was still going, crying havoc where they went. She
got her hand up, signaled Chur with a blinker; after an interminable
moment it went out. Second dump. There was
Tully's voice over the open com; and Hilfy's comforting him -- Hilfy,
who not so long ago had ridden sickly through the jumps, and now
steadied their passenger. "Getting image,"
Geran said. "There are ships out here." None in their way: Geran
would not be so calm. They were zenith of everything and everyone. "Getting course
input," Haral said; and the screen shifted, lines blinking and
calling for matchup, the lane assignment from the buoy. Third dump. Pyanfar
swallowed heavily and looked at scan again as it sorted itself out.
"Image aft," Geran said: it went to number two screen.
Mahijiru. The wavefront was running up their backsides, where that
ship and its partner were aimed if they delayed dump. "Too close, mahe,"
Pyanfar muttered. Final dump. They hit
course, down the slot and true, on Kilan Station's guidance.
"Transmit intent to dock at Gaohn," Pyanfar said: that was
the innermost of the two stations of Ahr System, that about Anuurn
itself. The signal went out: the acknowledgment flashed back from one
of the robot buoys, automatic routing, approach as routine as any
incoming merchanter. "Dump behind us,"
Chur said. "Second arrival; both our I friends are in." "Transmit
instructions to ignore routing and stay on our tail. Give them a
signal." "Station scan,"
Geran said, "is showing a lot of ships. A lot of ships." Pyanfar looked. Six major
planets about Ahr: Gohin; Anuurn itself; Tyo; Tyar; Tyri and Anfas --
with assorted moons, rings and planetoids. Anuurn alone was
comfortably habitable; and Gaohn Station circled it; and there was
Kilan Station which supported the little colony on Tyo. There was
always traffic. Hani were not the colonists that mahendo'sat"
and stsho and even knnn tended to be: but here, in home-system, there
was always traffic, from little ships which plied the system to the
greater ones which jumped in from other stars; there was the huge
null-g shipyard of Harn Station, where all hani ships were born and
where they came for refitting and repair. But there were twice the
usual number, easily twice, ships in offlanes positions, waiting;
ships in clusters; ships by groups of four and five. "I don't
like that," Haral said. "Not all ours,"
Pyanfar said. And after a moment: "He's here. Goldtooth said it;
the kif at Kirdu said it. Hinukku's come here. After revenge." No one said anything. The
minutes crept up on the chronometer. The Pride was sending her own
signal, computer talking to computer. A telltale flashed and a signal
came over com. "Mahijiru," Chur said. "Aja Jin, Both
moving up on our track." "Blink them a
comeahead," Pyanfar said. "Tightbeam; nothing more." "Permission to move
about," Tirun sent from lowerdeck. "Denied. Got a situation
here. Stay put." "Understood," Tirun answered. Chur leaned down, opened
the cabinet by her post and brought out a bottle, sucked a bit from
it and passed it on; it went to Geran and to Haral; finally into
Pyanfar's hand with an exact quarter visible through the opaque
plastic. She sipped at it, her mouth like paper and tasting days
stale; her hand left shed fur on the moist bottle when she dropped it
into the wasteholder. The salt and the moisture helped, took some of
the shakes from her limbs. There was still a misery in her back and
in her joints, a tendency for her eyes to blur. Not easy on the body,
double-skipping. Bodies were not designed for such abuses. She
thought of docking, of having to walk about, to deal with possible
trouble --
To get a shuttle and to
get downworld with all else hovering about them. . . . Something clenched about
her gut, protesting. She looked at scan, their own, tight scan,
number four screen, where a friendly blip was moving up into
intercept. Another blip showed on the edge of the screen. "Got synch,"
Goldtooth's voice came through. "Jik come up otherside." "Got too many ships,"
Pyanfar said, signaling Chur to put the transmission through. "Want
you where you are, mahe." A mahen chuckle. "A." "Rot your hide." She shut it down. "Got station
contact," Chur said. "They don't say anything out of the
way; normal approach instructions." "Three berths,"
Pyanfar said. "Together. Tell them to clear something if they
don't have it. Talk them into it." It was a long interval.
They still had lagtime from station. "Stationmaster," Chur
said finally, "intervened to grant it. We've got twenty through
twenty-two." "Comment?" "Nothing," Chur
reported. Trouble. Pyanfar's ears
flicked. If they could demand ships shunted about and get their
request it was because they had a right to it; and if they had a
right to it, then there was an emergency in progress. Homecoming kin
had right-of-way . . . in situations of death; of challenge; of
disasters. "System's quiet,"
Chur reported. "I'm not getting idle chatter. They're not
volunteering any information, captain." "Kif," Pyanfar
said. "Outsiders present." Tully said something from
belowdecks. Went silent. Hilfy's voice followed, talking to him, low
and urgent. "Let's not have any
panic down there," Pyanfar said. "Tully. Quiet. Take
orders, hear?" "Understand,"
Tully said. The minutes crawled past.
Jik's Aja Jin came into position, so that The Pride went flanked by
the mahe. "Goldtooth," Pyanfar said. "You
come onstation with me; want your friend stay out of dock and watch,
a?" "A," the answer
came back, short and sweet; from Jik no word. He would do it, Pyanfar
thought. Station was sending specific instructions: Haral was
attending that, inputting it for comp. She hit the shunt which dumped
the data onto Haral's screens, with a blinking warning that control
of the ship came with it: Haral nodded, accepting it without missing
a keystroke. Pyanfar loosed her restraints, swung her cushion about
and assayed to get her feet under her. "Get to the bridge,"
she told those below, leaning over com. "Aye," Tirun sent
back. Pyanfar walked about a bit, unsteady on her feet, bent down
enough to get some of the dried food out of storage by her own
console. Chips and bottles of salts. She opened them, put them in
reach of Haral and Geran and Chur, chewed on a bit of dried meat and
washed it down with half a bottle of the liquid. Dehydrated. The
jumps took some time off bodies. She walked about trying to get the
needling pains out of her joints, heard the lift in function and then
steps coming down the corridors. "Captain." Knnn-song wailed out of
com. "Gods and thunders!"
Pyanfar spat. "Location on that." "Ahead of us,"
Geran said. "One of those ships moving up on station." Tirun and Hilfy and Tully
had arrived, stood together in the archway which opened onto the
bridge, silent in the grating sound which ran the scale. Knnn never called at
Anuurn. Never, till now. "It overjumped us,"
Pyanfar said with -- she reckoned -- commendable calm. "If
that's our knnn, it just overjumped us by at least an hour." "Fast bastard,"
Tirun muttered. "Mahijiru," Chur
said, "asks if we notice." "Cut that thing off,"
Pyanfar said. "Tell Mahijiru yes, we did notice." She
pricked up her ears with an effort, flicking the rings into order on
the left. "Hilfy. Tully's channel." Hilfy turned her pager
onto broadcast. "Tully -- we're home now. Anuurn. Got trouble
here." "Kif," Tully
said. "I hear. Hani -- make deal with them?" "Papers,"
Pyanfar said sharply, and when Tully's hand went to his left pocket:
"You keep those with you. You're registered; you've got a number
in the Compact. No. No way the kif can take you by law. Going to have
one lot of mad kif, maybe; maybe some mad hani. But they can't take
you, except by force." "Fight them." "You take my orders.
My crew, my orders." "Pyanfar." Tully
thrust out his hand to stop her from turning away. "I don't go
from you." Pyanfar flattened her
ears, staring up into Tully's pale, distraught eyes. "I don't
need someone making me conditions. You do what I tell you." "Do. Yes. I go on
this ship. With you. #### give ### hani I quick dead." "We've got troubles
enough, Outsider. Hani troubles as well as kif. Let be." "With you. Long time
voyage. With you." "I'm not your kin,
rot you. You come on my ship, you make me trouble -- what in a Mahen
hell do I owe you?" "Dead, outside. Need
you." "Huh." Male. The
shout left a quiet after it. Alien male, but all the same she saw the
line drawn, the edge past which there was no thinking . . . their
patient, docile Outsider. She cuffed his arm, claws not quite pulled.
"You listen, friend Tully; you think, rot your hide. We go off
this ship; we; you; we come back, you come back with us. Hear?" "Come with you?" "I say it." He flung his arms about
her; sweaty, reeking as he was, as they both were, he hugged her with
abandon. She freed one arm and the other and shoved him off in
indignation, which in no wise changed the look in his eyes. "Do all you say,"
he said. "By the gods you'll
do it. You do something wrong and I'll notch your ears for you. You
keep that brain of yours working or I'll rattle it like a gourd. Can
you do that? Can you look at a kif and not go crazy?" That took a moment's
thought. He nodded then. "Get them other time," he said
confidently, waved a hand toward the wide infinite. "We go find
kif other time pull their heads off." The mangled extravagance
appealed to her; he did, with his clear-eyed insanity. She cuffed him
harder and got a moment's shock, not temper -- like Khym, like her
own easygoing Khym, where Kohan would have swung and cursed at the
sting. She was reassured, that he was capable of restraint, that a
cuff on the ears stood a chance of getting his attention; that
blunt-fingered and slender as he was, a couple of them could hold him
if they had to. "If we get out of this," she promised him,
"we go skin some kif. Next trip out. I take you with me." That was premature. They
owned nothing to give away, least of all the disposition of the
Outsider. Lose Chanur, she thought with a chill, and they could make
no more promises at all; but confidence burned in Tully's eyes, a
trust that he was theirs. Gods. Theirs. Theirs for
managing, for using, for finding the location of his distant people
before the mahendo'sat or the kif could do so, and making a wedge for
Chanur trade. But it was Hilfy's kind of a look he gave her. Worship
... not quite. Absolute belief. She looked at Hilfy to be sure and
found the same. Looked disquietedly at the others, at Haral and Geran
and Chur and Tirun, who had their own rights on this ship which was
theirs as well as hers, who had been here longer and knew better and
had to know what the odds were. It was there too -- quieter, but as
crazily trusting. She talked about going kif-hunting and they gave
her that kind of stare. "Keep it sane in
here," she said. "I'm going to clean up. Tully, for the
gods' sake, bathe." She stalked out. The Pride
streaked on toward station. She had no least doubt that some of those
ships out there were kif, and that there was at least the remote
possibility that the kif might face about and start a run at them in
some berserk notion of revenge. If this Akukkakk saw no
other possibility, he might. But his presence here, before her,
indicated that he knew that she had to come here; and why; and that
he had a chance of revenge far wider than one ship, a handful of
deaths. It was Chanur he was
aiming at. His information was accurate enough to have brought him
here. Somewhere, hani had talked; and he knew where to put the
pressure on. Faha, she thought
unworthily, but the suspicion nagged at her. If not the Faha, others,
who had talked too freely at some dock or -- gods help them -- Handur
prisoners, taken alive at Meetpoint. She doubted the latter: the
destruction had been thorough: and Goldtooth denied the chance of
survivors. But someone, somewhere -- had said enough in the wrong
hearing. She put the thought away. It was too bitter.
She wore the red this
time, red silk breeches and the best of her rings and the pendant
pearl. Appearances. She combed and brushed until her mane and her
beard gleamed red gold highlights. She splashed on perfume, reckoned
that some sweeter scent would hardly hurt Tully, and pocketed one of
several vials in the drawer. For Hilfy she pocketed
something too. She went back to the bridge then, distracted herself
with current reports on their approach -- Hilfy was not there, nor
were Tully or Geran or Chur, but Tirun had taken the number three
cushion next Haral. "No trouble," Pyanfar observed. "Routine so far,"
Haral said. "I'll take it. Your
turn." Pyanfar slid in at her place and Haral slid out of hers,
weary and staggering in the use of cramped muscles. "Getting some kif
transmission," Tirun said after a moment. "Operational.
They know we're here. Nothing more said." "How many of them, do
you reckon?" "Station's given us
an accurate count. Seven." "Gods have mercy." "Aye." Pyanfar shook her head and
called up the various images available to her screens. They were
coming in under automatic at present, locked on station's guidance.
Vid image filled one screen, Anuurn itself, blue and marbled with
cloud. Beautiful. It was always beautiful on approach, never so
spectacular as Urtur, but full of life. It conjured blue skies; and
grassy\plains and broad rivers and vast seas; it conjured colors; and
scents; and textures; and a gut feeling which was different than all
other words ... for hani. She watched at her
leisure: with The Pride under automatic there was little else to do.
A sweep of their second vid camera showed their mahen escorts riding
slightly aft, two sleek killers, so precise in position they might
have been one single ship. "Aja Jin advises
he'll drop back to guard as we go in," Tirun said. "Understood." "Still picking up
signal from that knnn. Tried the translator on it. I get nothing but
a docking matchup, aside from the singing." "They docked?" "Quarter hour ago.
Gods know what station's going to do with them. No facilities except
the emergency hookup. I don't get any outside transmission on that
problem." "Huh." "Not a word from
anyone else in system. Unnatural quiet." "Kif docked?" "All seven." "Thank the gods for
that. You sure?" "Station's word on
it." Pyanfar laid her ears
back, scowled. It was too cooperative all round, kif who put into
station . . . something was crooked here. Badly out of trim. It was
far too late to turn about. And there was Kohan and all of Chanur
below, who had no such options to turn and run. Therefore The Pride
did not. "Station requests all
weapons shielded." Pyanfar considered a
moment, reached to the board and complied. "Done," she
said, wishing otherwise. Presumably Mahijiru did the same. Aja Jin
had dropped behind them now, in a defensive position at their
vulnerable tails. "Got plan?"
Goldtooth's voice reached her ears then, transferred from Tirun's
board. "Want you with me
when we go out," she said. "You understand hani station
rules. Know them all?" "All," Goldtooth
confirmed. "See you on the
dock." Weapons, she meant to say:
hani stations observed no weapons-rules. It was not a thing she
wanted to discuss on com. She trusted that the mahe would turn up
armed. It was certain the kif would.
XI Automation took them in to
the last, trued to the cone. It was an easy dock. The grapples
touched and locked on both sides. The instruction came up to access
the line ports; declined, she sent back, refusing that mandated
service. It was not likely, considering the circumstances, that
station would quibble. No objection came back, only a pressure
reading for the station itself and a recommendation to use the ah-
shunt in the lock. "They know it's
trouble," Pyanfar muttered. "Tirun, someone's got to stay
aboard. You're it; you and Geran. Sorry." "Aye," Tirun
muttered unhappily. No discussion. "Shall I page Geran and
advise her?" "Do that." "Want both of you
fit. If we can't get back, take command, your own discretion. Take
the ship and get out of here, pick up crew at Kirdu -- mahendo'sat or
anything else; and make it count, hear me?" Tirun's ears went down.
"You're not planning on it." "Gods no, I'm not
planning on it. But if, if, old friend. If we lose -- in any sense --
neither hani nor kif sets hand to The Pride. That's firm." "That's firm,"
Tirun said. "Tully -- our problem or yours?" "Mine," Pyanfar
said. "He's walking evidence. And more problem than you need.
You've got that tape; you've got an ally in the Kirdu stationmaster
if it comes to that. I don't leave you any instructions. If something
goes wrong, make up your own rules." "Right," Tirun
said. The order split the
sister-teams down the middle. If it came to that -- Tirun and Geran
would be a wounded half. But that was the way it went: she wanted
Haral's size and strength with her, and Tirun was hardly fit for a
fight. Chur was the smallest of the lot, but of the two remaining,
the meanest temper. Pyanfar extended her hand in rising, pressed
Tirun's shoulder. Practicalities. Tirun knew.
They gathered belowdecks,
all of them, clean and combed, excepting Tirun, who had never gotten
her turn at washing up: Tully wore a white stsho shirt belted
hiplength about him, and a better pair of blue breeches -- Haral's
likely, who had been sharing clothes with him. Pyanfar looked the
party over; and remembering the perfume in her pocket, took it out
and tossed it at Tully. "All things help," she said. Tully
unstopped it and sniffed, wrinkled his nose and looked doubtful, but
when she j mimed putting it on, he splashed some on his hand and
wiped I his beard and his throat. He coughed, and thrust the bottle
into his own pocket. "Another matter,"
Pyanfar said, and took a fine gold ring from the depth of her
lefthand pocket, offered it to Hilfy and had the satisfaction of
seeing the look in Hilfy's eyes. "I won't take you anywhere
ringless. If we meet some kif, or even politer company -- you'd
better look like where you come from, hear, imp?" "Thank you,"
Hilfy said, looked uncertain with it, and flustered; but Geran tugged
her head over on the spot and bit a I neat place for it, deftly
thrust the earring through for her and fastened it. "Huh,"
Pyanfar said, there being her niece with I her first gold shining in
her ear and pride glowing in her eyes, j "Come on. Let's find
out what's waiting out there. -- Tirun, Geran, you keep that lock
sealed for everyone but us, no matter how bad it gets to sound, no
matter what they offer you. Get on the com in op. Tell Goldtooth to
get moving." "Aye," Tirun
said. Neither Tirun nor Geran was pleased with the unship assignment
-- Geran was trying to be cheerful, and not well succeeding: "Take
care," Geran said, patted Chur's shoulder. "Luck,"
Tirun said, last, and Pyanfar nodded to the others and walked with
them down the corridor, leaving Tirun and Geran to get to business:
she and Haral and Chur, and Hilfy; and Tully, who looked back, when
none of the rest of them did, with a forlorn expression. Pyanfar went first into
the airlock, waited for Tully, hand on the hardness of the pistol she
had in her pocket -- as all of them had but Tully; he hurried in with
them and Haral closed the inner hatch. One further insane moment
Pyanfar debated with herself, then made up her mind and opened the
locker by the outer hatch, took out the pistol they kept there and
gave it to Tully. "Pocket," she said when he looked anxious
surprise at her. "Pocket. Don't touch it. Don't think about it.
If / fire, you can, hear? If you see me shoot, then you shoot. But I
won't. It's civilized here. Hani don't take nonsense from the kif and
kif know that. If the kif get nasty they find themselves more hani
than they know how to run from. Promise you. You draw that at the
wrong time and I'll skin you." "Understand,"
Tully said fervently. He thrust the pistol into his pocket and put
his hands demonstratively in his belt at his back. "I take
orders. I don't make mistake." "Huh." She
touched the bar. The airlock's outer seal opened for them and her
ears popped with the pressure change as the cold air of dockside
sucked through the access tube. Sounds outside echoed, nothing out of
the ordinary. Pyanfar led the way onto the ramp way plates, around
the curve and down toward the grayness of the dockside, with all its
metal and machinery. The translator was out of
pickup range now: Tully became effectively deaf and mute. Pyanfar
looked askance at him as they walked out the arch of the farside
lock, onto the dockside itself. He was sticking close to Chur and
Hilfy, or they to him, while Haral brought up the rear, tall and
solid and looking like business with her scars and her be-ringed left
ear. Haral had instinctively planted herself back there to guard the
rear and quite possibly to head off Tully if he should lose his head.
The latter was not likely, Pyanfar thought with some assurance. Old
hunter that she was, she had some sense which way things would dart
in a crisis, and she had Tully figured for the other direction. She
directed her attention sharply ahead, where dockworkers had set up
cord barriers -- where a station official, Llun house or one of half
a dozen other Protected families which kept the station, made her
body the gateway, guard enough for a hani station, where civilized
folk knew what they would touch off if they harried a warder
representing her family and her family's post. Llun, that guard, if the
set of the ears was any true indication, a mature hani in the black
breeches of officialdom immemorial. The Llun drew a paper from her
belt as they approached her, and offered it, not without an ears-down
look at Tully: but the Llun kept her dignity all the same. "Ker Chanur, you're requested
for Gathering in the main meeting area. You're held responsible for
all the others of your party; it's assumed the mahen ship is under
your escort." "Accepted,"
Pyanfar said, taking the paper. The Llun moved aside then to let them
pass, impeccable in her neutrality. A little distance away, at the
next berth, a similar barrier was set up about Mahijiru's access.
"Come," Pyanfar said to the others, and walked in that
direction, took the chance to scan the official summons. "Charges
filed," she said. "Compact violations and piracy." "Rot them," Chur
muttered. "We're going to get
that shelved," Pyanfar said, looked up again and let her jaw
drop as Goldtooth led a good number of mahe down onto the dock, a
Goldtooth resplendent in dark red collar and kilt, glittering with
mahen decorations. "By the gods, look at him." "Merchanter,"
Haral spat. "And I'm kif." "Come on,"
Pyanfar said to her company. Goldtooth offered his papers to the hani
on guard, but the guard waved him through unquestioned; the mahe and
his crew walked out to join her in the walk toward the main dockside
entry, a towering dark crowd of mahendo'sat. Sidearms, openly
carried, businesslike heavy pistols strapped to the right leg.
Decorations, worn by more than one of the group. "Where we go?"
Goldtooth asked. "Gathering. Ihi.
Place where we sort things out. Hani law here, mahe. Civilized." "Got kif here,"
Goldtooth muttered. "Got Jik watch our tail." They entered the corridor.
It stretched ahead, polished, clean, uncommonly vacant. No young ones
about, precious few of anyone except officials in uniform, a very few
hani dressed like spacers, who watched in silence and stepped well
aside. "Too few," one
of the mahe observed. Goldtooth made a low sound, uninformative. "Too rotted few,"
Pyanfar said. She turned a necessary corner, saw the doors of the
meeting hall ahead, double-guarded. She took no more thought of her
companions then, of mahe or Outsider or kinswomen, flicked her ears
to settle the rings in place and waved a grand gesture to the
black-trousered hani who stood there. "Chanur," one
said. The doors whisked open, and a milling, noisy crowd of hani were
gathered beyond -- a crowd which retreated in growing quiet as they
swept into the room. Pyanfar stopped in the midst, hands in her belt,
looked toward the Cardinal point of the room, at the station
authorities who gathered there, at Llun and Khai and Nuurun, Sahan
and Maura and Quna, evident by their position and by the posted
Colors in front of which they stood. And kif, to their right, a
cluster of black robes. A pair of stsho. Pyanfar's nose wrinkled and
her ears flattened, but she lifted them again as she faced the Llun,
who stood centermost and prominent among the station families. She
held up the paper and proffered it for a page who retrieved it and
took it to the Llun senior. "Chanur requests
transport downworld," Pyanfar said quietly. "Our claim has
precedence over any litigation." The Llun senior -- Kifas
Llun herself, broad and solid and unmistakable in her gold and her
dignity, unhurriedly took the paper, thrust it into her belt, and
looked again at Pyanfar. "A complaint of piracy has been filed
by Compact law; by treaty, this station has obligations which have
precedence." "The rights of a
family when questioned bear on treaty law and define the han. Our
place is in question." The Llun hesitated, mouth
taut. "Challenge hasn't yet been issued." "Yet. But it will be
now -- won't it, her Kifas? You know it; and I know it; and there are
those here flatly counting on it. Point of equity, her Kifas. Point
of equity." There was long silence.
The Llun senior's ears lowered and lifted. Her nose wrinkled and
smoothed again. "Point of equity," she declared. "The
composition of the han is in fact in question. Family right takes
precedence. The hearing is postponed until Chanur rights and Mahn
have been settled." "No," said a
familiar, kifish voice. Among the tall, black-robed figures there was
a stirring, and Pyanfar moved her hands to her hips and close to her
pockets. More of the kif moved -- to the outrage of the hall, the
whole kifish contingent left the rim of the meeting hall and came out
to the center of it. The stsho moved with them, gangling pale
figures, sorrowfully gaunt, their pastel patterns asymmetric and
erratic on their white skins, their persons in disarray and their
heads drooping. And one kif stood taller than the rest, his stance
that of authority among them. Pyanfar pursed her lips and slowly drew
them back, eyes broadfocused on all the kif, well toward a dozen of
them and, gods knew, armed beneath those robes. "Akukkakk," she
said. "We protest this
decision," the kif said to the Llun. Not whining, no: he drew
himself up with borderline arrogance. "We have property in
question. We've suffered damages. This Outsider and these mahe are in
question. I claim this Outsider for kif jurisdiction; and I claim
these mahe as well for crimes committed in our territories. They're
from the ship Mahijiru, which is wanted for crimes contrary to the
Compact." "Tully," Pyanfar
said. "Papers." He moved up beside her and
gave them to her, rigidly quiet. She offered the papers to the page,
who took and read them. "Tully. Listed by
Kirdu Station authority as crew, The Pride of Chanur, with a mahen
registration number." "The connection is
obvious," the kif said. "I charge this Outsider with attack
on a kif ship in our territories; with murder of kif citizens; with
numerous atrocities and crimes against the Compact and against kif
law in our territories." Pyanfar tilted her head
back with a small, unfriendly smile. "Fabrications. Is the Llun
going to tolerate this move?" "In which acts,"
Akukkakk continued, "this Chanur ship and all its crew
intervened at Meetpoint, with the provocation of a shooting incident
on the docks, the killing of one of my crew; with the provocation of
a hani attack in the vicinity of the station, in which we defended
ourselves. In which attack this mahe intervened and took damage, a
reckless act of piracy -- " "Lie," Gold
tooth said. "Got here papers my government charge this kif." "A wide-reaching
conspiracy," Akukkakk said, "in which Chanur has involved
itself. Ambition, wise hani. Don't you know the Chanur ... for
ambition? I am kif. / have heard . . . the Chanur have maintained a
tight hold over the farther territories where your ships go, private
for themselves and their partisans. Now they deal with the mahe, on
their own; now they make separate treaties with Outsider forces,
contrary to the Compact, for their own profit. Kif relations with the
mahe are not friendly; we know this particular captain and his
companion who hovers armed and waiting just off the station
perimeter, threatening our ships and yours. This is your law? This is
respect for the Compact?" "Llun," said
Pyanfar, "this kif is disregarding the station's decision. I
don't need to specify the game he's engaging in. The law protects the
han from such outside manipulations. These charges are a tactic,
nothing more." "No," said a
voice from the gallery behind. A hani voice. A voice she had heard.
Pyanfar turned, ears flattened, pricked them up again as she saw a
whole array of familiar faces on the other side of the hall. Dur
Tahar and her crew; and the Faha beside her. "This is not,"
the Llun said, "a hearing. The kif delegation has its right to
lodge a protest; but the matter is deferred." Dur Tahar walked forward,
planted herself widelegged. "What I have to say has bearing on
the protest. The kif s right that the Chanur's gone too far, right
that the Chanur's made deals on her own. Ask about a translator tape
the Chanur traded to mahendo'sat and denied to us. Ask about this
Outsider the Chanur claims as crew. Ask about deals worked out in
Kirdu offices which excluded other hani and created incidents from
there to Meetpoint." "By the gods,
ambition!" Pyanfar yelled, and crooked an extended claw at the
Tahar's person. "Ambition's a spacer captain who'd side with a
hani-killing kif to serve her house's grab for power. Gods!" she
shouted, looking about the room at strange faces, at unknowns,
insystem crews and landless on Anuurn for the most part. "Is
there anyone here from Aheruun? Anyone from that side of the world,
someone here to speak for the Handur ship this kif killed at
Meetpoint, while they were nose-to-dock and had no idea there was any
trouble in the system? Ambition -- is the Tahar, who left us at Kirdu
crippled and alone and came running home to use the information to
Tahar advantage, who sides with the kif who hit three hani ships and
a fourth ship from outside our space, a kif who's terrorized these
wretched stsho into coming here with gods know what story, a kif
who's created a crisis involving the whole structure of the Compact.
By the gods, I know what blinds the Tahar to the facts -- but you,
you, Faha -- great gods, they killed your kin, and you stand there
taking the part of the hakkikt who had you boarded? What's happened
to your nerve, Hilan Faha?" Hilan opened her mouth to
answer, stepping forward, ears back, eyes wild. The kif howled and
clicked, drowning whatever she tried to say, and howled until
Akukkakk himself lifted a bony gray arm and shouted, turning to the
Llun. "Justice, hani, justice. This lying thief Chanur was
involved from the beginning, private ally of the mahendo'sat, an
agent of theirs from the beginning, involved with them in attacks,
reckless attacks into our territory which we do not forget." "This kif,"
Goldtooth roared, louder still, "hakkikt. Killer. Thirty ships
his. Make all kif together, this hakkikt. Make move new kind trouble
in Compact, got no care Compact, spit at Compact." He strode
forward, pulled a wallet from his belt and slammed it into the hands
of the page. "Papers say from my government truth. Hani and mahe
hunt this one, yes. Got kif run from mahe, move into territory this
new Outsider, this Tully. Big territory. Big trouble. I make truth
for the han; I make liar this Akukkakk Hinukkui. I witness at
Meetpoint; this kif lie." "Danger our station,"
the stsho stammered, thrust forward by the kif. "We protest --
we protest this incident; demand compensation -- " "Enough," the
Llun said over all the uproar, and hani noise died quickly; kif
commotion sank away likewise. - "Llun." Hilan Faha said in
that new quiet. "Enough," the
Llun said, scowling. "The kif has his right to protest and to
advance a claim. But since that claim exists, all sides have a right
to be heard. There's a further statement entered in this cause." She took a card from her
belt, thrust it out for the harried page, who took it in haste and
thrust it into the wall slot which controlled the hall viewing
screen. It flared to life, rapid printout.
stsho kif knnn
(*) hani mahe tc'a
station ship ship
ship ship ship self
trade kill see
here run watch know
fear want see
hani escape help knnn
violation violation
violation violation violation violation self
CompactCompactCompactCompactCompactCompactCompact
help help help
help help help help
Tc'a communication, matrix
communication of a multipartite brain, simultaneous thought-chains.
Pyanfar studied it, took a deeper breath, and Goldtooth looked, and
the kif, and all the hani. "It's our shadow,"
Haral murmured. "It's the tc'a with that rotted knnn." "It got itself an
interpreter, by the gods," Pyanfar muttered, and a vast grin
spread across her face. "Got itself that tc'a off Kirdu and it's
talking to us, gods prosper it -- See that, kif? Your neighbors don't
like your company, and someone else saw what happened, someone you
can't corrupt." "We've got a major
crisis thanks to you," Dur Tahar cried, thrusting herself
between her and the Llun. "Gods blast you, Chanur, that you can
find anything encouraging in knowing the tc'a are involved in this
mess. Knnn mobbed my ship outbound from Kirdu, knnn, like in the old
days of dead crews and stripped freighters. Are you proud of that,
that you've gotten them involved? I call for the detention of this
Outsider pending judicial action; suspension of this mahe's permit
and papers; for the censure of the captain of The Pride of Chanur
along with all her crew and the house that sponsors her meddling." "But nothing for the
kif?" Pyanfar returned. "Nothing for a kif adventurer who
murdered hani and mahe and provokes a powerful Outsider species, with
all that might mean? Ambition, Tahar. And greed. And cowardice. What
have you got from the kif? A promise Tahar ships will be safe if this
dies down? I turned down a kif bribe. What did you do when they made
you the offer?" It was a chance shot, a
wild shot; and the Tahar's ears went back and her eyes went wide as
if she had been hit hard and unexpectedly. Everyone saw it. There was
a sudden hush in the room, the Tahar visibly at a loss, the kif
drawing ever so slightly together, the stsho holding onto each other.
It was bitter satisfaction, the sight of that retreat. "Bastard,"
Pyanfar said, with a sudden rush of sorrow for the Tahar, and for the
Faha who stood there in that company, ears fallen. Akukkakk stood
with his arms folded, kifish amusement drawing down the corners of
his mouth and lengthening his gray, wrinkled face. "He's laughing,"
Pyanfar said. "At hani weaknesses. At ambition that makes us
forget we don't trade in all markets, in all commodities. And at his
reckoning we'll trade again to get our ships moving again outside our
own home system -- because there are more kif out there than you see,
and hani won't all fight. Hani never do. Hani never have. And I've
been stalled long enough. I was promised transport downworld and I'm
taking it. I'm going home and I'm coming back, master thief, master
killer -- and I'll see you in that full hearing." Akukkakk no longer
laughed. His arms were still folded. The kif were all very quiet. The
whole room was. Pyanfar made a stiff bow to the Llun, turned and
walked for the door, but Goldtooth and his crowd lingered, facing the
kif. Tully slowed and looked back, and Pyanfar did, scowling. "Goldtooth. You come.
I'm responsible for you, hear? As the Tahar's made herself
responsible for this kif onstation. Come on." The Tahar said nothing to
the gibe. That was the measure of their disarray. "Got friend,"
Goldtooth said to Akukkakk. "This time, got friend, and not at
dock. You docked good, kif, got you nose to station. Maybe you ask
hani give you safe escort, a?" Akukkakk scowled.
"Perhaps. And perhaps Chanur will be so kind as to do that
herself. When she comes back from Anuurn." A chill wind went
wandering across Pyanfar's back. She stared a moment at the kif,
thinking over the odds. The Llun and the insystem merchanters were
thinking likewise, surely, what they might logically do with seven
kif ships and two mahe hunters. "Give me,"
Akukkakk said, "the Outsider. Or the translation tape. It's not
so much. I can get it from the mahe, sooner or later." "Ha, like you get
from hani?" Goldtooth muttered. "What hani give,"
Pyanfar said darkly and with distaste, "is a matter for the han.
Consensus. Maybe, hakkikt. Maybe we'll talk this thing out, with
assurances on all sides. Before it damages the Compact more than it
has already." The quiet persisted, on
all sides. The stsho stared back at her from haunted pale eyes, the
kif from red-rimmed dark ones, hani from amber-ringed black. Kif
faith. She turned her back, retreated as far as the door of the
chamber, and this time Goldtooth and his crew were with her -- and
Tully, whose face was pale and beaded with sweat. The door opened and sealed
again at their backs. They passed Llun guards. The corridor stretched
ahead, empty. "Going to my ship,"
Goldtooth said. "Going to back off and keep watch these kif
bastard." "Going to the shuttle
launch," Pyanfar said. "Got business won't wait. Got stupid
son and trouble in Chanur holding. Life and death, mahe." "Kif find you go,
make one shot you shuttle. Jik make you escort, a? Run close you
side, make orbit, get you back safe." She stared up at the
mahe's very sober face, reached and clasped his dark-furred and
muscular arm. "You want help after this, mahe, you got it.
Number one help. This kif lies. You know it." "Know this,"
Goldtooth said. "Know this all time." Their ways parted at the
intersecting corridor. Pyanfar pointed the way back to the dock, a
straight walk onward, and Goldtooth took it, his crew with him, a
dark-furred, tall body moving off down the hall. Pyanfar motioned her
own group the other way, which curved toward the shuttle launch. Steps hurried after them,
clawed hani feet in undignified haste. Pyanfar looked about as the
rest of her party did, saw a young and black-trousered stationer come
panting toward her. The youngster made a hasty bow, looked up again,
ears down in diffidence. "Captain. Ana Khai. The station begs
you come. All of you. Quickly and quietly." "Station gave me
leave for my own pressing business, young Khai. I'm due a shuttle
downworld. I'm not stopping for conferences." "I was only given
that word," the Khai breathed, her eyes shifting nervously over
them. "I have to bring you. The Llun is there. Quick. Please." Pyanfar glared at the
young woman, nodded curtly and motioned the others about to follow
the messenger. "Quick about it," Pyanfar snapped, and the
youngster hurried along at the limit of her strides, hardly keeping
ahead of them. It was, as the Khai had
said, not far, one of the secondary meeting rooms at which door a
whole host of stationers and no few insystem spacers hovered, a crowd
which parted at their approach and swarmed in after them. The Llun indeed. The old
man of the station, sitting in a substantial cushioned chair and
surrounded by mates/daughters/nieces and a few underage sons, without
mentioning the client familiars, the black-trousered officials, the
scattering of spacer captains. Kifas Llun was there, first wife,
standing near him, and there were others of other houses. A Protected
house; the Llun could not be challenged, holding too sensitive a
post, like other holders of ports and waterways and things all hani
used in common, and he had slid past his prime, but he was impressive
when he got to his feet, and Pyanfar exchanged her scowl for a
respectful nod to him and to Kifas. "This trouble,"
he said, and his voice shook the air, a bass rumbling. "This
Outsider. Let me see him." Pyanfar turned and
gathered Tully by the arm. There was a panicked expression in Tully's
eyes, a reluctance to go closer to the Llun. "Friend," she
said. "He." Tully went, then, and
Pyanfar kept her claws clenched into his arm to remind him of
manners. Tully bowed. He had that much sense left. "Male, na
Llun," Pyanfar said quietly, and the Llun nodded slowly, his
heavy mane swinging as he did so and his mouth pursed with interest. "Aggressive?"
the Llun asked. "Civilized,"
Pyanfar said. "But mahe-like. Armed, na Llun. The kif had him
awhile. Killed his shipmates. He got away from them. That's where
this started. We have a translator tape on him. We'll provide it with
no quibbles. I want it on record he gave it freely, for his own
reasons. In the Tahar matter -- that's a han question. I didn't trust
the Tahar as a courier. Gods witness -- I'll be sorry to be right.
And by your leave, na Llun, I'll be back to answer your questions.
There's a matter of time involved. I was given leave to go." "Challenge has been
given," Kifas Llun said, and Pyanfar darted her a hard look.
"Only now the word came up." Pyanfar thrust Tully back
to Hilfy's keeping and started away without a word. 'Ker Chanur," Kifas
said, and she cast a burning look back. "A quicker way: listen
to me." "I'll want a com
link," Pyanfar said. "Now." "Listen, ker Chanur.
Listen." Kifas crossed the room to her and took her arm to stop
her. "Our neutrality -- " "Gods rot your
neutrality. Keep the kif off my back. I've got business downworld." "Got a ship,"
one of the insystem captains said unbidden, a hani of Haral's build.
"She's old, ker Chanur, but she can set down direct on Chanur
land, that no shuttle can do. Tyo freight lander: Rau's Luck. I'm
willing to set her in the way of trouble if Chanur's minded." Pyanfar drew in a breath
and looked at the aging captain. Rau was no downworld house. Insystem
hani, landless and unpropertied except for a ship or two, unless they
were Tyo-based, colonials. "Your word is worth
something," Kifas said, "Pyanfar Chanur. We're bound by the
Compact. We can't do more than pin these kif at the station. You've
got the mahe for help. You can do more than we can. Chanur has two
more ships in that might be of use. Tahar -- " Kifas did not finish the
statement; her ears flicked in discomfort. "Yes," Pyanfar
said. "Tahar. I'm not so sure I'd rely on their ships either at
the moment." "We can't muster a
defense," Kifas said. "Your captains are downworld with
most of the crews. So are others. We've got kif at dock for as long
as we can keep them, but you said yourself -- there may be others." "You've got the
insystem captains." "Against jumpship
velocity -- " Pyanfar looked about her,
at the spacers present. "Go to the jumpships you can reach; you
can fill out crews. Take orders. No matter what house. Get those
ships able and ready. I'll get the Chanur captains back here; and any
others I can find. In the meantime, keeping those ships ready to go
will be the best action with the kif." She looked at Kifas Llun,
grim sobriety. "Your neutrality is in rags. Give me one of your
people. To bring witness down there to what's going on. I have to get
moving. Now. Mahijiru and Aja Jin will keep the kif pinned and the
way open. -- If I don't move, ker Llun . . . the upheaval in the han
is going to make differences, differences to more than Chanur.
Tahar's down there, I don't doubt they are. Standing in line to get a
share of the spoils. You're already in it. I'm not going to let
Chanur go under." "Rau," Kifas
Llun said. "You're ready to go?" "On the instant,"
the Rau captain said. "Ginas," Kifas
said, with a gestured signal to one of her people. "Go with the
Chanur. Talk to them. Answer what you're asked. You're at her
orders." The one singled out bowed.
Kifas offered the door, a sweep of her hand. "Llun,"
Pyanfar murmured in a quick bow of courtesy toward Kifas and toward
na Llun, who had seated himself again. Then she turned and swept her
own company, the Llun messenger included, toward the door, following
the Rau captain. "This way," the Rau said, indicating a
turn which would take them toward the small-craft docks. Kohan, Pyanfar persuaded
herself, would not have taken challenge immediately as it was
offered, not knowing that she had reached the system; and surely he
knew by now: it was routine that a house was notified when a ship
belonging to it made port. The timing of it argued that his enemies
knew; and surely Kohan did. He was too wise to be catapulted into any
such thing without some preliminaries: she relied on that, with all
her hopes. Two hours by plane from
the shuttleport to the airport that served Chanur and Faha and the
lesser holdings of the valley: with the Rau's proposal they saved
that much time: and on that too she relied. And on a pair of mahe. And gods grant Akukkakk
saw some hope for himself. If one of those kif ships got a strike
signal off, if the kif was bent on suicide -- he might accomplish it,
if there were more kif ships lying off out of scan range. Maybe five,
six hours lag time for message and strike. With luck, the kif did not
know that the hani ships gathered in system were on skeleton crew;
with luck the kif would regard them as a threat ... if no one had
talked. "That ship of yours,"
Pyanfar said to the Rau. "Armed?" "Got a few rifles
aboard," the Rau said.
XII There was no access ramp
for an insystem workhorse, only a dark tube into a chill and dimly
lit interior directly off the dock. The Rau dived in first and
shouted to her crew, a thundering and booming of feet on the
uncushioned plates. The air was foul, stinging to the nose. Pyanfar
came aboard seconds after the captain of the Luck, put a hand on the
hatchway as she stooped to enter and drew the hand back damp with
condensation -- seals leaked somewhere in the recycling systems. Gods
knew what the margin was on lifesupport. She worked her way past
lockers to the control pit of the probe, trusting Haral and Chur to
get everyone else aboard and settled. "Name," she
asked of the Rau captain, dropping down into the three-cushion pit,
waist-high, and ducking under the overhead screens. "Nerafy,"
the captain said, nodded back toward her presumed co-pilot and
navigator who were dropping into the pit on the other aide. "Tamy;
Kihany." "Got us an escort,"
Pyanfar said. "Mahe's going to see we get there and back; move
it. No groundlings in this lot. Will you give me com?" "We're going,"
Nerafy said, sinking into her cushion. The hatch boomed shut,
deafening. "Kihany: it's Anuurn we're headed for; get the
captain that link." Repulse cut in. Pyanfar
hand-over-handed her way around the back of the cushions to the
com/navigation board and braced herself with feet and a hand on the
rim to lean over the board. "I want," she said, ignoring
the contrary slams of g against which she shifted without thinking,
"relay to Aja Jin. Mahe. Get that ship first." It took a moment. A mahe
voice came crackling through. They lost g as Rau's Luck executed a
wallowing maneuver, acquired it again. "Aja Jin. Have you got us
in watch? Track this signal." "Got," the
comforting answer returned. "Got. We watch." "Out," Pyanfar
said. She broke it off, not anxious to have long conversations with
kif to pick them up. The mike in hand, she tapped the harried
navigator on the shoulder. "Next call: satellite to ground
station Enafy region, area 34, local number 2-576-98; speak to anyone
who answers." The navigator threw her a
desperate glance, shunted her functions to the copilot and started
working, no questions, no objections: "What landing?" the
copilot was asking; "First we get there," Narafy said. "Got
ourselves a rescue run. Speed counts." "Map Coordinates
54.32/23.12," Pyanfar said, listening to the one-sided com. They
were in contact with Enafy. In a moment more the navigator held up a
finger and she tucked the plug into her ear and applied herself to
the mike. "Chanur," she said, shaking; but that was from
the cold. "Is Chanur answering?" "Here," said a
voice from the world, distant and obscure by a bad pickup. "This
is Chanur Holding."
"This is Pyanfar.
We're on our way in. Who's speaking?" There was a moment's
silence in which she thought the contact was lost. "It's aunt
Pyanfar," that voice on the other end hissed within the mike's
pickup. "For the gods' sake, tell Jofan and hurry!" "Never mind Jofan,
whelp! Get Kohan on and hurry up, you hear me?" "Aunt Pyanfar, it's
Nifas. I think ker Jofan's coming . . . The Tahar are here; the Mahn
have challenged; Kara Mahn has; and Faha's gone neutral except
Huran's still here; and Araun and Pyruun have called that they're
coming. Everyone's gathered here. They knew -- Aunt Jofan, it's -- " "Pyanfar."
Another voice assumed the mike. "Thank the gods. Get here." "Get Kohan on. Get
him. I want to talk to him." "He's -- "
Jofan's voice trailed off or static obscured it. "I'll try. Hold
on." "Holding."
Pyanfar rested the back of the hand which held the mike against her
mouth, shifted her body in pain: they were under acceleration now.
The rim of the pit was cutting into her back. She achieved a little
relief, found all her limbs shaking against the strain, the physical
effort of the position she maintained. She watched the screens,
seeing something else moving on scan. Aja Jin, she hoped. It had
better be. "Pyanfar." The
deep voice, static-ridden, exploded in her ear. Kohan, beyond
mistake. "Pyanfar." "Kohan. I'm in
transit. I'm coming. How much time, Kohan?" A long silence. "Kohan." "I'll wait till you
get here. I think I can stall it that long?" "I'm coming in on a
direct landing. I want you to stay inside and hear nothing and see
nothing. I have something with me. Something you'll find of
interest." . "This Outsider." "News has got there." "Tahar -- make
charges against you." "Already settled.
Settled. You understand?" There was another
prolonged silence. "I have my wits about me. I knew you were on
your way. Had to be here if this crowd showed up in such graceless
haste." She let go a long breath.
"Good. Good for you. You keep at it." "Where's Hilfy?" "Fine. Fine and safe.
I'm on my way. Now. No more talking. We've got business. Hear?" A breath crackled through
the static. "I'll work that Mahn whelp into a fit of his own."
It began to sound like a reassuring chuckle. "I'll sit inside
sipping gfi and enjoying the shade. -- Move, Pyanfar. I want you
here." "Out," she said.
She handed the mike back, a strain of her arm against acceleration,
let the arm fall back and shivered as it sank in how long that
conversation had been, how clear it was who was speaking from this
shell of a ship. They were on directional to the satellite: perhaps
no one had picked it up. "Got it set up,"
Narafy said. "I'm going back to my
crew," Pyanfar said. She edged her way out of the pit, one foot
against the bulkhead. "Safety line," the captain advised
her; she saw it, and tucked down, gained the braking clip on the line
and wrapped her hand into it. Launched herself down the long pit of
the central corridor, past moisture-dewed metal and aged plastic
lighting panels, her own weight and a half on her arm. She reached
the barriered recess of cushions where the others had snugged in and
Haral snagged her, hauled her with difficulty over the padded safety
arm which closed off the compartment, and in several hands, one pair
alien, she let herself collapse into the cushions with the rest of
them. "Got contact with Kohan," she breathed, sorting her
limbs out from among the rest of them. "He's going to stall." Hilfy's face. She saw that
tight-lipped relief and felt a little dismay for the girl who had
come onto The Pride a voyage ago j and the woman who stared back at
her, self-controlled and reckoning the odds. "Got contact with the
mahe too," Pyanfar said. "They're with us." She cast a
look past Chur and Haral to the Llun, Ginas, who nodded, a flat-eared
and anxious stare in return "You don't," Pyanfar said,
"have to make the return trip There's no reason for you to, ker
Llun. We just get you down safe the one time, that's all." "Appreciated,"
the Llun said tautly. "Captain." Haral
thrust a package of chips into her hands, and a bottle of drink.
Pyanfar braced the bottle in her lap and hooked a claw into the
package, hands trembling with the prolonged strain, used the claw to
punch double holes on the.,; plastic bottlecap and spout. The food
helped, however difficult to swallow in the acceleration stress. She
offered to the others. 1 "We've had ours,"
Chur said. Bodies squirmed down the I line, everyone settling. Tully
tried to talk, hand signs and mangled words, and Hilfy and Chur
communicated with him as best they could, speaking slowly, something
to do with the ship and atmosphere. He was cold; they held onto him
and settled finally. Pyanfar rolled a strained glance at Haral and
then closed her eyes, numbed by misery. There was no more that she
could do for either situation, the one on the ground or the one on
station. Kohan's nerves would be on the ragged edge by now. This
go-and-stop-again psyching for challenge would wear at him by the
hour. Like nerving oneself for a jump and walking back from it. The
second effort was a harder one. A from-the-heart effort. Gods knew
how long the situation had been sawing at Kohan's nerves. Months.
Since the night Hilfy left. Since before that -- when he saw Khym
Mahn likely to fall to challenge. There was a point past which he
would heave up any food he tried to eat, awake all night, wearing his
strength down with pacing, with the constant adrenalin high which
would wear him to skin and bone within days. Huran and some of the
other mates had stayed. There were his youngest couple of sons, who
had run for the borders if they had any sense, not to linger within
his reach. There were a score of daughters, who might muster worth
enough to see he ate and slept as much as possible approaching this
time. Daughters, mates, and with the captains % in, several more
half-sisters, who were most reliable of the lot. But there were grown
Chanur males who might come straying back from exile to key up the
situation further -- returned from Hermitage, from wandering, from
gods knew what occupations which filled the lives of males in the
sanctuaries. Always, at challenge, there were those, hopeless, keyed
up, and dangerous, hanging about the fringes. As for young Kara Mahn, he
was probably good. He had taken Khym, who had survived thus far more
by wit than by strength. Kara had promised both size and
intelligence, the last time she had seen him. Chanur blood, after
all, Chanur temperament. She cursed her own stupidity, in seeking
after a mate like Khym, a quiet and peaceful domicile, a mountain
hideaway and Khym, a resting place, a garden like a dream. Khym had
listened to her stories, soothed her nerves, made her laugh with his
wit; an ideal mate, without threat to Chanur's interests. But gods,
she had never thought what she left behind in that place, her own
Chanur-blooded offspring, larger than Khym's daughters and sons of
local wives; larger; and stronger; and -- if such things could be
inherited -- quarrelsome and demanding. Nothing like family
loyalty. Her son yearned after his Chanur heritage so much he wanted
to take it for his own. Betterment of the species,
hani philosophers had called it. Churrau hanim. The death of males
was nothing, nothing but change happening: the han adjusted, and the
young got sired by the survivors. One man was as good as another; and
served his purpose well enough. But by the gods it was not
true; there were the young and the reckless who might, on a better
opponent's off day, win; there were challenges like the one shaping
up against Chanur, which involved more than one against one. And sometimes -- gods --
one loved them.
She slept somewhat, in the
steady acceleration, in sensations so uncomfortable numbness was the
best refuge; and in the confusion of jump and time, her body was
persuaded it was offshift or perhaps the shift past that. A new sensation brought
her out of it, weightlessness and someone hauling her out of a drift
as a light flashed. "About to make descent," Haral said,
and Pyanfar reached for a secure hold in preparation. It was a rough descent:
she expected nothing else. She had no idea of the shape of the
lander, but it was not one of the winged, gliding shuttles. The
lander hammered its way down after the manner of its kind, vibrating
stress into the marrow of living bones and vibrating skin and tissues
and eyes in their sockets, so that there was nothing to do but ride
it down and wish desperately that there was a sight of something,
something to do with the hands, some sequence which wanted thinking
about and managing. There was a time she
simply shut her eyes and tried to calculate their probable position;
she had, she decided, no love of riding as a passenger. Then the
sound increased and the stresses changed -- gods, the noise. She
heard what she fervently hoped was the landing pods extending. They were in straight
descent now, a vibration of a rhythmic sort. Touch, one pod and then
the others, a jolt and a series of smaller jolts, and silence. Pyanfar flicked her ears
with the sudden feeling that she was deaf, looked about her at her
shaken comrades. Down was different than before: the gimbaled
passenger section had reoriented itself and the central corridor was
flat and walkable. "Out," Pyanfar said. "Let's see
where they set us down." Hilfy unlocked the padded
safety barrier, and they went. Hydraulics operated noisily and when
they had come as far as the control pit, daylight was flooding in
onto the metal decking from the open lock. The others descended.
Pyanfar delayed for an instant's courtesy, a thanks for the Rau crew
who were climbing out of their pit, their ship secured. "If you
come," Pyanfar said, "well; you're welcome in Chanur land.
Or if you stay here -- we'll be bringing more passengers as quickly
as we can." "We'll wait,"
Nerafy Rau said. "We put you close, Chanur. We'll have the ship
ready for lift; we'll be waiting." "Good," she
said. That was her preference. She ducked under the conduits and
swung down onto the extended ladder, scrambled down to the rocky flat
where they had landed, in the generally wedge-shaped shadow of the
lander. The air smelled of scorch and hot metal; the ship pinged and
snapped and smoke curled up from the brush nearby. Midday, groundtime. The
shadows showed it. Pyanfar joined the others and looked where Chur
pointed, to the buildings which showed on a grassy horizon: Chanur
Holding; and Faha was farther still. And the mountains which hove up
blue distances on their right -- there lay Mahn Holding. Close
indeed. "Come on,"
Pyanfar said. She had made herself dizzy with that outward gaze, and
shortened her focus to the rocky stretch before her. Horizons went
the wrong .way; and the colors, gods, the colors. . . . The world had
a garish brightness, a plenitude of textures; and the scents of grass
and dust; and the feel of the warm wind. One could get drunk on it;
one had enough of it in a hurry, and the sight filled her with a
moment's irrational panic, a slipping from one reality to the other. "Not so far,"
Hilfy panted, latest from the world. "They'll have heard that
landing. He'll know." "He's got to,"
Haral agreed. So will others, Pyanfar
thought, deliberately slowing her pace. Rushing up exhausted -- no;
that was not the wise thing to do. Tully checked his long strides as
they did; the Llun who had trailed behind them caught up. Manes were
windblown, Tully's most of all. The sun beat down with a gentle heat:
autumn, Pyanfar realized, looking about her at the heavy-headed
grasses, the colors of the land. Insects started up in panic, settled
again. "They'll surely send
a car," Chur said. "If they've spotted us." "Huh," Pyanfar
said; it was her own hope. But none had showed thus far, no plume of
dust, nothing of the sort. "They may," she said, "have
their hands full. No good any of them leaving, not if things are
heating up." No one answered that. It
called for nothing. She kept walking, out to
the fore of the others. Familiar ground, this. She had known it as a
child. They reached a brook and waded it ankle deep, came up the
other side, and by now Tully was limping -- "He's cut his foot,"
Chur said, supporting him while he lifted it to examine it. "You
come," Pyanfar said
unforgivingly, and he nodded, caught his breath and kept going. Not so far now. They
joined the road that led to the gates, easier going for Tully, for
all of them. Pyanfar wiped her mane from her eyes and surveyed the
way ahead, where the gold stone outer walls of Chanur Holding
stretched across the horizon, no defense, but a barrier to garden
pests and the like -- the open plains lapped up against it in grassy
waves. Beyond it -- more buildings of the same gold stone. There
would be cars . . . the airport was behind them, down the road; they
would have come in from there, all the interested parties and the
hangers-on, save only the adventurers from the hills, from Hermitage
and sanctuaries, who would come overland and skulk about the fringes;
vehicles would have driven in along this road, gone through the
gates, parked on the field behind the house . . . that was where they
always put visitors. When their uncle had
fallen to Kohan --
The years rolled back and
forward again, a pulse like jump, leaving her as unsettled. Homeward
. . . with all the mindset which took things so easily, so
gods-rotted eagerly. Nature. Nature that made
males useless, too high-strung to go offworld, to hold any position
of responsibility beyond the estates. Nature that robbed them of
sense and stability. Or an upbringing that did. The grillwork gates were
posted wide, flung open on a hedge of russet-leaved ernafya,
musky-fragrant even in autumn, that stretched toward the inner gates
and the house, an unbroken and head-high corridor. She passed the
gate, looked back as the others overtook her, and in turning --
"Pyanfar."
Someone came from among the hedge, a rustling of the leaves; a male
voice, deep, and she spun about, hand to her pocket, thinking of
someone out of sanctuary. She stopped in mid-reach, frozen by
recognition a heartbeat late -- a voice she knew, a bent figure which
had risen, bedraggled and disfigured. "Khym," she
murmured. The others had stopped, a haze beyond her focus. The sight
hurt: impeccable and gracious, that had been Khym; but his right ear
was ripped to ribbons and his mane and beard were matted with a wound
which ran from his brow to chin; his arms were laced with older
wounds, his whole body a map of injuries and hurts, old and new. He
sank down, squatting on the dust half within the hedge, his knees
thrusting out through the rags of his breeches. He bowed his filthy
head and looked up again, squinting with the swelling of his right
eye. "Tahy," he said
faintly. "She's inside. They've burnt the doors down ... I
waited -- waited for you." She stared down at him,
dismayed, her ears hot with the witness of her crew and of the Llun
-- on this wreckage which had been her mate. Who had lost that name
too, when he lost Mahn to their son. "They've set fires in
the hall," Khym stammered, even* his voice a shadow of itself.
"Chanur's backed inside. They're calling on na Kohan -- but he
won't come out. Faha's left him, all but -- all but ker Huran;
Araun's there, still. They've used guns, Pyanfar, to burn the door." "Kohan will come,"
Pyanfar said, "now. And I'll settle Tahy." She shifted her
weight to move, hesitated. "How did you get to Chanur? Kohan
knows?" The whole eye looked up at
her; the other ran water, squinted almost shut. "Walked. Long
time ago. Forget how long. Na Kohan let me ... stay. Knew I was here,
but let me stay. Go on, Pyanfar. Go on. There's no time." She started away, down
that road which led to the house, not without looking back; and Hilfy
walked beside her, and Chur and the Llun, but Tully -- Tully had
lingered, stared down at Khym, and Khym reached out a hand to stay
him, only looking. . . . Khym, who had delighted in
the tales she brought him, of strange ports and Outsiders, and he had
never seen a ship, never seen an Outsider, until now-^- "Tully!" she
called, and Haral caught him by the arm and brought him quickly. And
then: "Khym -- " she called. For no reason. For shame.
Kohan had been as soft . . . when Khym had strayed here in his exile,
hunting some better death than strangers. He looked up at her, a
slow gathering of hope. She nodded toward the house, and he picked
himself up and came after them: that much she waited to know. She
turned on the instant and set a good pace down the dusty road, eyeing
the hedges which followed its bending. Ambush, she thought; but that
was an Outsider way, something for kif and mahe, not hani on
Gathering. Still. ... "Scatter," she
said, with a wave of her arm to her crew. "The garden wall: get
there and we'll settle this daughter of mine. Hilfy: with Haral;
Tully -- Chur, you take him. Ker Llun, you and I are going through
the gate." Ginas Llun nodded, her
ears flat with distress, and while the others scattered in opposite
directions through the hedge, Pyanfar thrust her hands into her belt
and strode along at a good pace around the bending of the road and
toward the inner gates. A step scuffed behind her, and that was Khym:
she turned to look, to encourage him with a nod of her head, herself
in gaudy red silk; her companion in official black; and Khym -- grimy
rags that might once have been blue. He came near her, beside her,
limping somewhat; and gods, the waft of infection in his wounds --
but he kept their pace. They could hear it now,
the murmur of voices, the occasional shout of a voice louder than the
others. Pyanfar's ears flattened and pricked up again; a surge of
adrenalin hit fatigued muscles and threatened them with shivers.
"It's not challenge," she muttered, "it's riot." "Tahar's here,"
Khym said between breaths. ''Na Kahi and his sisters. That's second
trouble. It's set up, Pyanfar." "I can bet it is.
Where's our son's brains?" "Below his belt,"
Khym said. And a few steps later, with the sounds of disorder clearer
in the air: "Pyanfar. Get me past Tahy and her crowd and I can
make a difference in this . . . take the edge off him. That much,
maybe." She wrinkled her nose,
gave him a sidelong glance. It was not strict honor, what he
proposed. Neither was what Tahar intended. Their son -- to end him by
such a maneuver --
"If I can't stop it,"
she said, " -- take him." Khym chuckled, a throaty
rattle. "You always were an optimist." They rounded the last
curve, the gate ahead, wide open toward the gardens, the aged trees,
the vine-covered goldstone of the Holding itself. A crowd surged
about the front of the house, trampling the plantings and the vines.
They shouted, taunts and derision toward Chanur; they rattled the
bars of the windows. "Rot them,"
Pyanfar breathed, and headed for the gate. A handful of Mahn spotted
her and set up an outcry, and that was all she wanted: she yelled and
bowled into them with/ Khym at her side, and the Mahn retreated for
reinforcements in the garden. "Hai!" she yelled, and of a
sudden there were Hilfy and Haral atop the wall, and a peppering of
shots into the dirt in front of the Mahn, who scrambled for cover. "Get the door,"
Pyanfar yelled, waving at them, and they jumped and started running:
more of the Mahn and some of their hangers-on were on the colonnaded
porch, and of a sudden Chur and Tully were on the low garden wall
which flanked that, Chur yelling as if encouraging a whole band of
supporters. The Mahn darted this way and that, herdwise, and
scattered from the door in the face of the three-way charge. Pyanfar
raced up the steps and converged with Haral and Chur, gun in hand,
burst through the doorway half a step ahead of them, into dimmer
light and a chaos of bodies and the reek of smoke. It was a huge
room, lit from barred windows, the wreckage of double doors at the
end: hani there turned and faced their rush in a sudden paralysis, a
hundred intruders who stared at leveled Chanur guns. Some moved; young women
put themselves into the fore of things. Others shifted about the
fringes, carefully. Voices echoed deep within the halls. Pyanfar kept
the pistol braced in her two hands, her eyes wide-focused, taking in
all the movements. That young woman -- her
own image, red-gold mane and stature more than her Mahn sisters:
Tahy. Her focus narrowed. The young man -- gods, tall and straight
and broad-shouldered . . . years since she had seen them. Longer
years for her planetbound daughter and son, growing-up years; and
they had allies ... a score of Mahn youths, male and female; and
about the walls of the room -- Kahi Tahar, na Kahi, the old man,
Chanur's southern rival; and others -- senior women of holds she
suspected as Enaury and others of Tahar's hangers-on, here for the
scavenging. "Out of here,"
Pyanfar said. "Out of here, all of you." "Guns," Tahy
spat. "Is that the way of if? We have our own. Is that what you
choose, while na Kohan hides from us?" "Put them away,"
Pyanfar said. She pushed the safety back on, pocketed hers. In the
tail of her eye Haral did the same, and the others followed suit.
"Now," Pyanfar said. "You're somewhat strayed from the
field, son of mine. Let's walk this back out where it belongs." "Here," Kara
said. A movement in the corridor
behind the Mahn: Pyanfar noted it and drew in her breath. Chanur. A
good score of the house. And Kohan, a head taller than the others. "Hold it,"
Pyanfar shouted, moved suddenly to the side, distraction: the
invaders shifted in confusion and hands reached for weapons, a
moment's frozen confusion and suddenly Chanur at the Mahn's backs.
The Mahn retreated in haste, backing toward the wall that had been at
their left, but Tahy and her companions who thrust themselves between
Kara and Kohan quick as instinct; Pyanfar dived for the other side,
Haral and Chur and Hilfy moving on the same impulse, interposed
themselves. She touched Kohan's overheated arm. He was trembling.
"Back," she said. "Back off, Kohan." And to Tahy:
"Out. No one wins here. If Kohan delayed -- it was my doing; and
I'm here. With Ginas Llun, who'll back up what I say. With an
Outsider, who's proof enough we've got trouble. We've got kif at the
station: they've called the captains in ... to defend Gaohn. It's
like that up there. We can't afford a split in the han." Tahy gave a negative toss
of her head. "We hear a different story -- all the way. No. You
want to settle something on our own -- we'll oblige you. Kohan need
help, that you had to drag him up out of the brush? We'll settle
that." "Station's fallen,"
a voice said out of Chanur ranks, and one of the captains thrust
herself forward, Rhean, with crew in her wake. "Word's on the
com: they've called for help -- it's no lie, ker Mahn." Noise broke out in the
room, a ripple of dismay through all those present. The Llun strode
into it, neutrality abandoned. "How long ago? Chanur . . . how
long?" "Message is still
going." Kohan answered, self-controlled, though his breath was
coming hard. "Kara Mahn. I forget all this. It's over. Leave
now. We'll not talk about it." Kara said nothing. There
was a glassy look in his eyes. His ears were back. But Tahy looked
less sure of herself, motioned the others back. "You've got your
chance," Pyanfar said quietly, evenly. "Listen to me:
you've got Mahn. Tahar's not your ally. You go on with this
challenge, and Tahar's here to take on the winner: worn down, you
understand me. To take two Holdings. Their ambition's more than
yours. The Llun can tell you that -- a Tahar captain, dealing with
the kif -- " "Rot your
impertinence," Kahi Tahar shouted, and one of his sisters
interposed an arm. "A lie," that one said. "Perhaps,"
Pyanfar said levelly, "a misunderstanding. An . . . excess of
zeal; a careless tongue. Back out of here. We may not pursue it. --
Tahy . . . out of here. The Compact's close to fracturing. It's not
the moment. Get out of here." ''Na Mahn," Kohan
said. "It's not to your advantage." "You'll lose Mahn,"
Khym said suddenly, thrusting past Hilfy. "Hear me, whelp --
you'll lose it ... to Kohan or to Kahi. Use your sense." Kara was past it. The eyes
were wide and dark, the ears flat, nostrils wide. Of a sudden he
screamed and launched himself. And Khym did. Pyanfar
flung herself about, bodily hurled herself at Kohan as her crew did,
as Hilfy and Huran Faha and Rhean and her crew. He backed up, shook
himself, in possession of his faculties: Pyanfar saw his eyes which
were fixed on the screaming tangle behind her -- herself spun about,
saw Khym losing the grip that would keep Kara's claws from his
throat. "Stop it," she
yelled at Tahy, and herself waded into it, trying to get a purchase
on either struggling body, to push them apart. An elbow slammed into
her head and She stumbled, hurled herself back into it, and now
others were trying to part the two. "Tully!" Hilfy shouted;
and suddenly a fluid spattered them, straight into Kara's face, and
over her, stinging the eyes and choking with its fumes. Kara fell
back with a roar of outrage; and she did, wiping her eyes, coughing
and supported by friendly hands. Chanur had hold of Tully, she saw
that through streaming eyes -- his arms pinned behind him, and Khym
was down; and Kara was rubbing his eyes and struggling to breathe,
She caught her breath, still coughing, shook off the hands which
helped her, She knew the aroma; saw the small vial lying empty on the
floor -- the smell of flowers got past her stinging nasal membranes.
"Tully," she said, still choking, reached out a hand and
pulled him to her by the back of the neck, shook him free of the
Chanur who had seized him -- patted his shoulder roughly and looked
across at her son, whose eyes were still running water. "Break
it off, na Kara. You have Mahn. Call it enough." "Off my land,"
Kohan said. "Tahar. Be glad / don't challenge. Get clear of
Chanur Holding. Na Kara: a politer leave. Please. Priorities. I'll
not come at you now. I could. Think of that." Kara spat, turned, stalked
out, wiping his eyes and flinging off offered help, dispossessed of
his impetus, his dignity, and his advantage. Tahy remained, looked
down at Khym, who had levered himself up on his elbows, head hanging.
She might have flung some final insult. She bowed instead, to
Pyanfar, to Kohan, last of all to Khym, who never saw it. Then she
walked out, the other Mahn before her. Tahar lingered last, na
Kahi and his sisters. "Out," Kohan
said, and the Tahar's ears flattened. But he turned and walked out of
the hall, out the door, and took his sisters and his partisans with
him. Kohan's breath sighed out,
a gusty rumble. He reached for Hilfy, laid his arm about her
shoulders and ruffled her mane, touched the ring which hung on her
left ear -- looked at Pyanfar, and at Khym, who had struggled to his
knees. Khym flinched from his stare and gathered himself up,
retreated head down and slouching, without looking at him. "Got no time,"
Pyanfar said. "Well done. It was well done." Kohan blew a sigh, nodded,
made a gesture with his free hand toward the rest. Nodded toward the
door. "Ker Llun." "Na Chanur," the
Llun murmured. "Please. The station -- " "Going to be fighting
up there?" "No small bit,"
Pyanfar said. "You handle it?" "Might use some of
the house." "I'll go," Kohan
said. "/'// go up there." "And leave Tahar to
move in on the boys? You can't. Give me Rhean and Anfy and their
crews; whoever else can shoot. We've got to move." Kohan made a sound deep in
his throat, nodded. "Rhean; Anfy; Jofan -- choose from the house
and hurry it." He patted Hilfy on the shoulder, went and touched
Haral and Chur in the same way -- lingered staring at Tully, reached
and almost touched . . . but not quite. He turned then and walked
back. "Hilfy," he said. "My ship," Hilfy
said. "My ship, father." It cost him, as much as
the other yielding. He nodded. Hilfy took his massive hand, turned
and took the hands of Huran Faha, who nodded likewise. "Come on,"
Pyanfar said. "Come on, all of you. Move. -- I'll get her back,
Kohan." "All of you," he
said. The others gathered themselves and headed for the door in
haste, some delaying to go back after weapons. Pyanfar stayed an
instant, looked at Kohan, his :eyes, his golden, shadowed eyes; his
ears were pricked up, he managed that. "That matter," she
said, "this Outsider of mine -- I'll be back down to explain it.
Don't worry. Get Chanur back in order. We've got an edge we haven't
had before, hear me?" "Go," he said
softly. "I'll get it settled here. Get to it, Pyanfar." She came back and touched
his hand, turned for the door, crossing the room in a dozen wide
strides and headed off the porch, where no sign remained of the
attack but the trampled garden and a passing of vehicles headed down
the road beyond the wall, clearing out in haste. And Khym. Khym was there,
by the gate, crouched there with his head on his folded arms. Fresh
wounds glistened on his red-brown shoulders. He survived. He went on
surviving, out of his time and his reason for living. "Khym," she
said. He looked up. She motioned toward the side of the house, that
pathway which the others had taken to the back, where they could find
transport. He stood up and came, limping in the first steps and then
not limping at all. "I'm filthy," he said. "No polite
company." She wiped her beard and
smelled her hand, sneezed. "Gods, I reek for both of us." "What is he?" "Our Outsider? Human.
Something like." "Huh," Khym
said. He was panting, out of breath, and the limp was back. They came
along the side of the house, down the path by the trees at the back,
and latecomers from the house reached them and fell in at their pace,
carrying rifles. Khym looked back nervously. "It's all right,"
Pyanfar said. "You want to go, Khym? Want to have a look at
station?" "Yes," he said. They reached the bottom of
the hill, where Haral and Chur had started up two of the trucks,
where a great number from Chanur were boarding, a good thirty, forty
of them, besides those ten or so behind. Tully was by the side of
one, with Hilfy. Pyanfar reached and cuffed Tully's arm. "Good,"
she said. "Up, Tully." He scrambled up into the
bed, surprisingly agile for clawless fingers. Hilfy came up after
him, and Khym vaulted up with a weight that made the truck rock.
Others followed. Pyanfar went around to the
cab, climbed in. "Go," she said to Haral, and the truck
lurched into motion, around the curve and onto the road, toward the
outer gates, flinging up a cloud of dust as they careened between the
hedges, jolting into near-collision with the far post of the outer
gate before they headed off across the field on the direct course
toward the waiting ship. Gods help us, Pyanfar
thought, looking back at the assortment which filled the bed of the
truck, young and old Chanur, armed with rifles; and a one-time lord;
and Tully; and the Llun, who had decided to come back with them after
all. The ships had gotten off
station to keep the kif there, and the kif were still there, indeed
they were; were running the halls of station -- kif loose with
revenge in mind, a hakkikt who might see his own survival doubtful
and revenge very much worth having. She faced about again,
feet braced against the jolts as the truck lurched over uneven
ground. Haral fought the wheel with desperate turns and reverses,
following the track they had walked now, the beaten line of their own
prints in the tall grass, where there would be fewer hidden pits and
hummocks. "Hope Aja Jin's still
in place," Haral muttered. "Hope Hinukku and the
rest are," Pyanfar said, bracing her hand against the dash. "If
we've got more kif than we had -- if they've gotten a call out for
reinforcements. ..." "Lagtime's on our
side." "Something had better
be," Pyanfar said. "Gods, for a com." Haral shook her head and
gave all her strength to the wheel, slowed as they jolted toward the
slope of the stream. The truck lumbered its way over the grassy bank,
clawed its way over muddy bottom and rocks, slewed about and found
purchase on the other bank, headed up again, with the ungainly wedge
that was Rau's Luck growing closer and closer. A light was flashing,
sun-bright against the ship. Pyanfar pointed to it, and Haral nodded.
The Rau saw them coming. Running lights began to flash, red and
white, blink code. It was the message they
already had. Haral flashed the headlights, a desperate snatch back at
the wheel. Planetary speeds. In the
time it had taken them to get this far from the house, a jumpship
could cross an interworld distance. And perhaps some were doing that.
The han was intact, the structure of Holdings which could decide
policies; but the loss of Gaohn Station --
She cursed herself, to
have assumed any revenge would be too great for Akukkakk's pride; to
strike at stations -- he had done that; no one struck at worlds, not
in the whole history of the civilized powers. Except the kif... it was
rumored that they had done so, in their own rise off their native
world, in the contests for power. They had once struck at their own.
XIII The engines put on thrust,
a hollow roar of the downworld jets, and the Luck lifted. Pyanfar
dropped into the rear of the dark control pit as the deck came up,
hit heavily and crouching and tucked down, straightening the blanket
and pillow she had gotten to pad her back in that nook, on the pit
floor behind the Rau's three cushions. The captain lifted her hand,
signal that her presence was noted, and reached at once back to the
board in front of her. The Luck went on rising; the gear thumped up
into the housings and the pressure mounted. Pyanfar discovered a pain
in her shoulder and struggled a little against the blanket to relieve
it. Not so steep a lift
compared to the angle at which they had landed: the lander flew, of
sorts, vertical lift at first, and then an angled flight which still
had aft for downside, g-wise. The primaries cut in with a thrust
which settled all her gut differentially toward her spine. Some of their company were
well off, aft, in the padded passenger shell: Tully and Khym and
Ginas Llun were settled there, in thick cushions; and Haral, to keep
them company and settle problems. The unlucky rest rode the boards,
tilting cushioned partitions expanded from the next bulkhead --
blind, dark misery, packed in like fish, four across, the back of the
next cushion tilting back and forth almost in one's face . . . gods,
gods, to ride like that with the ship going into trouble aloft -- she
felt guilt for being where she was, in what relative comfort she had. The copilot let an object
fall to her. She reached with difficulty and gathered the
plastic-wrapped article from the angle of the pit where it stayed
fast, unwrapped the earplug and thrust it in. No information was
coming in during their ascent, only static, but having the contact
helped. Station had gotten that
one message off, had still been sending it out when ascent began,
which meant that the station central command had been in hani control
and that stationers had their hands full, sparing no one to answer
questions. It kept going, meaning that the kif had not gotten to it
to silence it -- or that they had had no critical interest in doing
so. But the docks -- She
pictured the workers fled in panic, disorganized, having no
preparation against such an action as the kif had taken. Attacking
stations was not a thing hani would do; therefore it was not
reasonable; therefore there was no contingency. Gods blast such thinking,
and the complacency which fed it. Gods blast her own; and hani
nature, that they ran each for their own fragmented concerns, because
all the world was set up that way. She had had no choice in going
home to Chanur, because a hani would go on with challenge while the
house caught fire, until the fire singed his own hide. Hani always
went their own way, disdaining Outside concerns, pricklish about
admitting they would not be in space at all but for the mahendo'sat
explorers who had found them -- but that was so. And hani went on
doing things the old way, the way that had worked when there were no
colonies and no outside trade; when hani were the unchallenged owners
of the world and hani instincts were suited to the world they owned. But, gods, there were
other ecosystems. They had another one going, in the Compact itself;
and they dealt with distances wider than the grassy expanses of
Anuurn's plains; and with creatures of instincts which had proven
equally capable of being right in other ways. In one unimagined hell,
the kif way had worked best; and gods, even the chi way had worked
somewhere, lunatic as they seemed, incomprehensible to Outsiders. And
Tully -- who sometimes made half sense, and at other times made none
at all. Had Goldtooth despised her
for her desertion, because being hani she had had no choice but to
go, in the face of every reason to the contrary? Shame pricked at
her, the suspicion that all hani-kind had failed a mahen hope, that
hope which had lent those two ships; and that somewhere up above
might be the wreckage of her mahen allies and The Pride itself, with
a kif waiting to blow this shell of a lander to vapor and junk, along
with the hani brain who had just figured out something critical to
the species, far too late. Madness. The angle had her
brain short of oxygen. There was a grayness about her vision. She
felt nothing any longer in her backside and her arms and her legs,
and the pressure kept j on building. Engine sound changed. They
were leaving the-envelope of I air, still accelerating. She blinked
and struggled to move her neck, saw through a blur telltales winking
in the darkness, saw j a flare of light as the scan screen cleared.
She blinked again, trying to see past the silhouetted arm of the
copilot, making out something large and close to their position. "... Luck," a
voice snapped through the plug into her ear, I "this is The
Pride of Chanur. We'll match with you and lock on." Tirun. If she could have leaped
up and shouted for joy she would I have done so. Pinned by the g
force, it was all she could do to smile, a strained and difficult
smile, with her heart hammering against her ribs and the blood
bringing pain to her extremities. Then the Luck's engines
stopped, and she gasped a reflexive breath in the sudden relief. The
invisible hand which had pressed her to the deck was gone, and she
reached in a practiced hand-over-hand to the com board, drifting feet
toward the overhead and tucking down again to reach the mike. "Hurry
it, Tirun, for the gods' sake. And to the Rau: "Where are the
kif? Can you pick them up?" "Station's scan's
off," the Rau navigator said. "Not just Gaohn's: Harn and
Tyo too, completely down. We've got our own, that's all." "Put on the rescue
beeper," Pyanfar said, thrusting that dire news to a far recess
of her mind. "The Pride can home on it. Let her automatics take
you." "Advice," the
captain said. "Your job now, her Chanur. Gods help us, we're
stone blind to any jumpships moving out there." "Keep her trimmed and
constant and watch out for the shock." Pyanfar aimed herself
back to the shelter of her padded nest in haste. "Those grapples
will do the fine matching, don't try the jets. She's moving under
comp." "Gods, it's on us,"
the copilot said. "Closing,"
Geran's voice sounded through the com plug. "Stand by, Luck." A proximity alarm started,
quickly silenced from the board. Scan broke up. "O gods," said
the navigator. Pyanfar tucked, clenching
the cushion support with all her strength. Impact. The Luck rang and
leapt and her body left the deck, grip scarcely holding; hit it
again, shoved back as the grapples grated, shifted. Held. There was a
comforting silence. Weightlessness. "Got trouble,"
Tirun's voice said. "Blow that lock out; we've got a tube the
other side. For the gods' sake board, abandon ship. We can't defend
you." "Haral!" Pyanfar
yelled down the core corridor. "Everyone! get forward!" "Captain,"
Nerafy Rau said. "Come on,"
Pyanfar said, hauled herself to the captain's cushion and hung there
one-handed, staring down at her. "All of you . . . gods, come
with us. We'll get you back to your ship if there's a chance of it.
If not that, there's kif to settle with, and those people on the
stations -- will you die here with no shot fired?" "No," the Rau
captain said, and started unbuckling. The others did. Pyanfar
completed the somersault and looked aft down the corridor, at a
white-shirted human sailing up it narrowly in advance of a flood of
armed hani. The Rau captain handed her way up from the pit and headed
for the nearby lock and Pyanfar grabbed for the board and the mike as
the crew left it. "Tirun! Where are the kif?" "Gods know.
Mahijiru's running far-guard; tell you the rest when you get here." The bodies of her
companions tumbled about her. The lock powered inward and airshock
rammed through in a cold gust. "Coming," Pyanfar said, and
let the mike go, kicked at the nearest conduit and flung herself into
the stream of bodies, into the dark and numbing cold of The Pride's
ship-to-ship grapple-tube. Extremities went numb. Breath stung in the
lungs and moisture threatened to freeze her eyeballs. It hurt, gods,
it hurt. A light glowed green as she arrived in The Pride's null-g
outer frame, a safety beacon, a guidance star far across the dark,
marking the location of the personnel lift. A blue chain of
glowlights dotted across the blackness toward it, the safety line.
"Khym!" Pyanfar shouted, thinking of his inexperience,
"blue's the guideline, Khym . . . Tully! go to the blue lights!" "Got him,"
Hilfy's young voice shouted up ahead. "Got them both." A door opened onto the
lift. Someone had gotten to it. A distant rectangle opened, blinding
white, with a score of dark bodies hurtling and struggling along the
blue dotted course toward it, large and small with distance, some
like swimmers in the air, some using the rope and propelling the
swimmers along. Bodies collided and caught each other and kept going,
one after the other, into that lift chamber, where they took on color
and identity. Pyanfar found herself slung along the final distance,
hauled into the lift; and among the last came the Rau, into that
blinding glare. "We're in," Chur
was shouting into com. Haral shouted a warning and closed the lift
door, and suddenly all the floating bodies tended floorward as the
car moved. "Brace!" Pyanfar snapped at the novices, but
experienced spacers grabbed them, and of a sudden the car thundered
and slammed into synch with the rotating inner cylinder. There was
full g, and the lift slammed upward again, with a queasy
rear-of-the-car acceleration stress as The Pride put on a gingerly
movement. Something banged in the distance. -- "Grapple's
clear," Haral said. The lift went on rising, past lowerdeck, to
main. Feet found the floor; bedraggled groundlings hugged those who
had a hold on them, ears flat and eyes wild. The car stopped and opened
on main. Pyanfar thrust herself through and out, raced down the main
corridor for the archway of the bridge, claws scrabbling on the
decking against the gentle thrust. Haral was hard on her heels.
"Lowerdeck," Chur shouted behind them. "Ride it back
down where there's secure space." The door closed; the lift
hummed into function again. Pyanfar did not look back. She hurled
herself the last difficult distance, past Geran and Tirun at the
number three and two posts as Haral found her place and slid into it.
Pyanfar reached her own vacant cushion and flung herself into it
without a word. Scan images were coming up on her screens, their
position relative to the world and the station -- a dot that was
knnn-symboled, hovering off apart from the chaos of other dots, two
marked mahe, and the horrid hazard near the station, a horde of
unidentifieds, debris sweeps that marked the death of ships and the
course of their remains. "Aja Jin took
damage," Tirun said steadily. "Kif invaded traffic control
on the station and knocked the scan out. Llun had their hands full;
everyone was boarding any ship at all. We broke out of dock and ran
with the rest . . . figured they were screening incoming ships.
Strike came in three quarters of an hour ago. Outbound now. We're
headed back in to station, present course: Fortune got a landing
party in. Several others got in after them. Proceed?" "Keep talking. Go as
we bear." She reached and hit the motion warning. "We're
moving," she said over allship. "Brace; I'm going to keep
the com open from our end. We've got troubles and I don't want any
stirring about down there. -- Tirun, what's the comp on that kif
movement? Got a course plotting?" The data flashed to the
screen. "All stations have killed scan output. Some of the kif
are out of dock but we don't know which. Only good thing in it, with
station's scan stopped a good bit before the strike, they had only
our last-known position to go on and the attack missed most of us.
Aja Jin got it, being posted stationary; at least one freighter was
hit and we think some of the kif, but we don't know who got hit,
because no one's outputting much chatter and a lot of the freighters
are scan-blanked and hiding. I figure they'll go for the fixed
targets on the next pass -- the station, Aja Jin's last position ..." "Anuurn, maybe." Tirun threw her an
ears-flat look. "You've got it
going," Pyanfar said. "I'll go with it. Give me the rest of
your reckoning. Where do you reckon Akukkakk is?" "I think he was one
that got off station; and he can't have boosted fast enough to have
run with the strikers. I figure he's one of those ships out there,
quiet like all the rest of them. And we find out just which one he is
when that strike force comes sweeping back in." Pyanfar nodded. To take
the maneuver they had handed him -- the undocking of the freighters
-- and to turn it to his own advantage . . . that was very probable.
That was Akukkakk's style, for which she had begun to acquire a
sense: a pattern of movements, a tendency to up the stakes when
challenged. "He's going to go on
sending them in against the station," she judged, "hammer
it into junk. That, for a lesson for us. But he knows rotted well
which one we are, cousins: we're all too conspicuous, and I've a
notion which way he'll go when he can -- even odds between us and
Mahijiru. And since Mahijiru's got Jik by him ..." She cast a
glance at scan, where the mahe rode as a double blip hard by the kif
position at station. "They'll be overriding their own scan, that
strike force, but Akukkakk's going to have a good identified image
for them. Gods rot him." "We drop our people
at station," Haral said from the fourth cushion, "and pull
a tight turn, maybe; go sort that crowd out." "Got to do something,
that's sure. -- Tirun: to you." She shunted back what activity
her board had received. "Take us in. I'm going to talk to the
others. -- Going to need all the rest of you up here. Stay put,
Haral." "Right," Haral
muttered. Pyanfar turned the
cushion, slid out of it, headed out of the bridge at a dead run into
the direction of thrust, digging in for traction. She skidded to a
collision with the wall at the lift, hit the call button and caught
her breath while it came. It arrived; she stepped in
and waited while it sped her to the lowerdeck, tremors in her
muscles, a tendency to shiver in what ought not to be a chill. Lowerdeck main corridor.
She found the Chanur gathered there, braced sitting in the passage,
rifles in laps, the best security they could find near their exit.
They scrambled up as she came . . . and there was Chur among them,
and Khym; and Tully, with Hilfy; and the Llun and the Chanur captains
and their crews. She went among them, caught Chur's arm and looked at
the others. "You've understood?" "Understood,"
Rhean Chanur said. "We try to get the stationers rounded up and
if we have to ride through another strike -- we get to core and try
to wait your pickup after it's past. Gods help us." "The Pride will be
back, Rhean; that's your ship that forced the breach: your crew, gods
look on them. I don't know what damage she may have taken: you'd
better plan for any pickup that comes for you. -- Anfy: same goes;
any ship. Got in-systemers filling jumpship posts, anything we can
get. Gods know who's where. -- The rest of you: if you use those
guns, you pair up with the crews and give backup fire. Hit the wrong
target and you'll kill your own allies, hear? Or blow a seal; keep
your wits straight and know what's behind what you're shooting at.
You go shooting on a station, hear me, you put your shots on the
decking and work up their legs." Young ears lowered in
distress; eyes stared, black-centered. Hilfy's look was something
else again, ears pricked, sober. Pyanfar stared at her, at once
pleased and heartsick. No way to pull her out of it. No need. Those
who went onto station and those who stayed with The Pride were in
equal danger. Maybe more, for them on the ship. Akukkakk would see to
it, given the chance. "Approaching dock."
com said. "Stand by for braking." "We'll not waste
time," Pyanfar said quietly, to those about her. "Chur;
Hilfy; you're all The Pride can send: do it right and get back; all
of you -- Khym ... go with my crew, hear?" He nodded. There was a
pricklishness in the air. No one else would have been glad to take
him. In Chur's and Hilfy's eyes there was no flinching. He glanced
toward them and the remnant of his ears lifted in the look they gave
him. For her sake, she thought.
Gods help them -- if he got one of them killed, rushing into
something blind-crazy. Braking started. They
braced against the corridor wall -- hard thrust, and miserable for
the approach. Pyanfar shut her eyes a moment, slid down to a crouch
with the rest of them, content for the moment to be where she was and
wishing to all the gods she could go with them. Tully -- squatted down
close to Hilfy; Pyanfar turned her head, tightened her mouth in
consideration. That was the one who might bolt. That was the one,
deaf to instructions, crazy with anger. Khym crouched farther down,
shamed, she knew, by his condition; by the distrust about him, the
expectation that he would be more danger than help to his own side,
prone to take his own way, prone to male temper and instability --
Khym, who had saved all their necks and given them the chance to get
aloft in time. Like Kohan, fretting in agony downworld, because he
was trapped in Chanur Holding; and gods, he had won. They lost g, made the
shifts, such that bodies leaned against one another in the nudgings
of the docking jets, and those who had a hold braced those who did
not. Contact. The last
direction of g confirmed itself and the grapples clanged home, the
access thumped into position. "Got contact with a hani force out
there," Geran said. "You've got a clear exit. -- Luck to
you." "Have some yourself,"
Chur called up at the com. "Hai, up there," Hilfy shouted,
and the lot of them scrambled up in readiness to rush to the lock. Pyanfar rose with the rest
of them. '"Tully," she said, and beckoned him. His face
which had been eager took on an apprehension of what she wanted; she
beckoned a second time, with the Chanur forces beginning to head down
the corridor toward the lock, and when he did not come she went after
him and took him by the arm, while Chur and Hilfy delayed. "Go," Pyanfar
said to the two. "Take care." They went, in orderly
haste, with the others, down the corridor toward the lock. Pyanfar
laid her ears back, felt Tully pull at her hand. "Ask," he said.
"Fight them, Pyanfar." "No," she said.
"You can't hear orders out there, understand? Come with me. Come
up to the bridge." If his pathetic small ears
could have moved they would have lain down, she thought; it was that
kind of look. "Yes," he said in a small voice.
"Understand." The lock opened and shut
again shortly after. "Coming up," she called to the open
com. "Easy on the undocking." Tully came with her,
running beside her. She got him into the lift and he leaned against
the wall with his eyes on hers, with pain in those eyes, like Kohan's
pain -- shadowed eyes, his bright mane tangled, his whole body
shrunken with exhaustion and unhappiness. "We go," she
said as the lift opened onto the bridgeward corridor. "We get
the kif, friend, find Akukkakk and settle a score, ship and ship." "There?" He made
a wide gesture, infinity. "This system. All too
close." She strode through the archway onto the bridge, grabbed
Tully's arm and thrust him for the auxiliary seat next Haral's post,
none so safe there, but nothing was. She slid into her own well-worn
cushion and fastened the restraints while Tirun ungrappled; took the
controls as The Pride acquired her own g, sent them out narrower than
she would have cut it with station authorities in a position to
protest. "Situation as-was?"
she asked Tirun. "Figure we've got a
little under a half hour on that strike," Tirun said. "Haral: to all ships;
got kif among us; broadcast ID's, now -- house and origin -- and get
our own signal going." "Right." She put
them over station. Vid showed the two mahe ships clear enough, a
scattering of ships which had never made it away from dock, some
wrecked, some trailing debris that streamed in the station's
rotation. Kif ships, three of them,
still at dock, with their tails singed: Mahijiru had done that much. From the mahe . . .
nothing, neither signal nor output. But they started to move, one
after the other. "We've stirred
something," she said. "Our friends have some notion they're
not talking about." "Getting ID input,"
Geran said. " Scan started acquiring
data, positive ID's on hani ships. The knnn zigged and darted at some
velocity, throwing off small ghosts that indicated boosts. Pyanfar
ran her tongue over her teeth, refusing that distraction, watching
the pattern of those ships as yet unidentified, as more and more
identifications came in and The Pride increased her own speed.
Another ship was moving in on dock, and another one behind, insystem
haulers, at a standstill compared to their own building velocity.
Ships were moving in random directions, not to be caught when the
strike came in -- at least that was their hope. "Rot them!"
Haral exclaimed. "Crippled even -- look at that speed." Jik, Haral meant. Aja Jin
trailed debris; but the two mahe kept accelerating with no apparent
impairment . . . straight into the thickest concentration of ships. She eased up, shut down
altogether. The mahe had given up flexibility, launched themselves
into the heart of things, deliberate and less and less able to veer
off and handle a turn. "Maintain our options," she said
quietly. Suddenly a freighter
designated hani blossomed into chaff. "Captain," Tirun
said. Three unidentifieds in the vicinity acquired the enemy
designation. Mahijiru and Aja Jin swept toward the group. "Keep out of our way,
rot you," Pyanfar muttered. Haral was on com, advising all ships
in the area to head off the kif movement. "Going to have the
mahe in line of fire if they do a straight turnover," Geran
said. "Fire headon -- " "Going to let the kif
pass our zenith," Pyanfar said grimly. "That's our best
side anyway." "I've got it,"
Tirun advised her, throwing the safety off the armaments of the upper
frame. "Knnn's coming up,"
Geran said sharply, and the proximity alarm beeped as the
high-velocity ship ripped from tail to bow, nadir, gone into the
developing mahe/kif confrontation so fast scan developed them a line
of likely course. "Mahijiru's
compliments." Haral relayed. Scan showed debris, hani,
mahe, or kif was uncertain: positions were too close. Dots coincided
and split as the kif moved toward them. Someone was hit; and suddenly
the fight was headed The Pride's way. "Akukkakk's there,"
Pyanfar said, beyond doubt what kif would rate The Pride his prime
target, disregarding the mahe who had just attacked. "Two ship now,"
Tully exclaimed. Scan showed the mahe still paired, no longer
accelerating and probably braking for their return; showed hani
moving on the kif from points of the sphere; and two active kif
ships. The third was involved with a debris-track, near the knnn's
erratic blip. "That kif they get." "This pair we got,"
Tirun muttered. The double image was closing with them, less and less
interval, with their own impetus added to the kif s oncoming
velocity. The knnn was on the return now, streaking out of the
vicinity of the debris-track. Mahijiru and Aja Jin were farther and
farther away, obliged to lose velocity before they could make way on
the kif s heading, too close to traffic for jump pulses to assist. "Which one?"
Tirun asked. "Take the best
target," Pyanfar said. "I can't tell." Hani jumpships
were on the near-scan now, several of them, hammering toward
intercept with the kif, but not in time for The Pride, No place for a
freighter, a race with the swift hunter-ships, even cargo-dumped. No
way to win. "Now!" The kif ripped past them,
zenith, and they fired. Screens broke up. Explosion slammed The Pride
askew and red-lighted the boards. Pyanfar reached in an adrenalin
timestretch, fought the pitch and wobble. In the screen's clearing a
new rapid image bore down on them, a high knnn wail in com. It went past them, zenith.
Pyanfar spun The Pride one hundred eighty degrees in a tail roll,
anticipating a kif turnover and return pass, hoping to get a shot
off. Mahijiru and Aja Jin would come; were coming; might get back in
time. The Pride fired back as the guns came in line: the kif had
proceeded into turnover as their respective momentum separated them,
and fire came back, broke up screens, red-lighted remaining clear
boards. "Got one," Geran
yelled. "Look at that bastard wobble. By the gods we got him!" Fire from the other kept
up. The interval was still increasing between them, but at a slower
rate. It would be coming back . . . soon. "Goldtooth,"
Pyanfar said, punching in the com, "rot you, hurry it a bit,
someone out there hurry it." The knnn was pulling about
in a tight turn, one of those maneuvers a knnn could survive and hani
could not. It zigged into the interval, into the line of fire. "Good job,"
Goldtooth's voice reached The Pride. "Got -- " Com broke up. Scan
suddenly went berserk, all the sensors blind . . . . . . jump field. Gods, a
jump field -- in crowded space. "Captain!" Tirun
yelled, far away and suddenly close as the field let them go. Tully
cried out, a miserable wail. Something was there --
where nothing had been; a massive presence, a vast blip on scan as it
cleared, a monster located to starboard zenith. They were off their
heading, displaced. Everyone was. Comp was flickering wildly trying
to compensate. Pyanfar keyed into the system, trying to get sense out
of it. Gods, the newcomer was huge. Scan had the other blips, that
were the kif and the mahe and the hani and the solitary knnn --
"Captain."
Haral's voice. Corn went on broadcast again, a wailing chorus which
overburdened the audio, noise vibrating above and below hearing,
wounding the ears. The huge blip broke apart,
fragmented, not debris, but discrete parts of which one stayed
central and the rest sped outward. "Knnn," Pyanfar
breathed. "Traveling in synch. Gods help us all." "Hani -- " Com
crackled through the static, a familiar, kifish voice. "Pyanfar
Chanur -- " The knnn ships moved
together, a cloud of them, headed for the kif; and all at once the
kif s outgoing velocity began to show increase -- Akukkakk had way
and he was throwing everything he had into it. Retreating. Unable to
boost up: the knnn were too close, and closer yet. The solitary knnn ship
zigged and darted and joined the chase. "Chanur!"
Goldtooth said. Pyanfar watched the
screens, frozen in place. Hani voices came over com, panicked,
questioning. The chase on scan gathered more and more velocity. Of a sudden came another
output, a signal which made no sense to comp: scan started blinking
on the ship-sized object the knnn had left behind, asking operator
intervention. An alien voice came over
com, Tully-like and frightened. Pyanfar cast a glance at
Tully, who clung sweating and jump-shocked to the edge of the com
counter, whose eyes stared wildly as the voice kept going. "## ship,"
translator rendered the transmission from the newcomer. "## ship
## you." "Com!" Pyanfar
yelled at Haral and got it. Her heart pounded against her ribs. "This
is the hani ship The Pride of Chanur. You're in hani space. Friend,
hear?" "Captain," Tirun
cried, "Captain, the knnn -- " The translator response
droned in her ears. Pyanfar stared at the screen, at a narrower and
narrower gap between the knnn and the fleeing kif. "Tully,"
she said without looking around. "Haral -- give him com. Give it
to him." The translator voice went
out, cut. She flung an instant's look back, at Tully, who had gotten
himself together, who had the mike in hand and talked a wild-eyed
rapid patter at these creatures who had arrived in knnn synch, in a
ship which had come in hauled like so much freight, unable to
communicate with the knnn --
"Captain -- " She looked about again.
Knnn closed with Hinukku, surrounded the kif, became one mass about
it, as they had been massed about the Outsider ship at its arrival. "Gods," Tirun
muttered. "They're trading,"
Pyanfar said incredulously. "Like at Kirdu -- gods, they're
making a trade. An Outsider ship -- for Hinukku. For Akukkakk." "Pyanfar!"
Goldtooth's voice came over com. "You got sense these bastard?" "Human ship,"
Pyanfar said, punching in her still-active link. "The knnn just
dropped a live cargo on us. Tully's kind. -- They're still going, by
the gods, the knnn are still going, outbound." "Kif ship leave
station," Jik cut in. "He go." A solitary kif, of the
crippled three at station ... it was so: a lame kif without a tail,
headed out on the course of the other lame kif, inching his way into
retreat. "Right down the incoming strike track, that's their
course," Pyanfar said, fairly shaking with excitement. "By
the great and lesser gods, they're pulling out, they're going to
run." There was a sudden and
major vacancy on scan, the characteristic scatter-ghost of a ship
departed into jump -- where the mass of knnn had been, enveloping
Hinukku. A vast ghost, a ripple in space-time; and hard after it -- a
smaller ghost, their own knnn. Vanished. The two remaining kif kept
going, realspace and realtime, headed for the far dark and sending
out a steady signal, telling of disaster. Running for their lives. "We got,"
Goldtooth said. "Got, Pyanfar." "Got. -- Gods know
what we've got." She heard Tully still chattering back and forth
with the newcomer, heard lilts and tones in his speech she had never
heard. She looked back at him, who had all but usurped Haral's com
board. He saw her. His face was wet. "Friend," he said to
her in her own language. "All friend." Gods knew what there was
to say to the newcomers that the translator could convey without
foulup. Gods knew how to cope with a dozen other Tullys equally
confused and upset as he had been in his arrival. "They come," she
said slowly, distinctly. "Tell them they come to station." "Come, yes." She spun about again,
toward the screens, started putting on thrust for a stationward
course. Other ships were proceeding on that heading, the hani
jumpships who had never slackened speed; hani who had kin on station;
hani who had crew from station or who had dropped landing parties on
the docks to try to assist the Llun. Anything might be
happening there, even now, with kif elsewhere in rout. A hundred Outsiders plated
in gold could not have interested her at the moment. "Captain -- "
Geran said; and of a sudden new data came up on the screens, and a
familiar steady signal came over audio. "Station's broadcasting
again, captain." She heard the mahe advise
them of the obvious, heard the alien chatter from the Outsider, who
must have picked it up, and the voices of hani sending anxious
queries to station. "Station is entirely
secure," the answer came back. "This is Kifas Llun
speaking; resistance has ended and the station is entirely secure." Pyanfar kept up the
thrust, reckless of the lights which advised of damage. That rotted
number one vane was hit again; gods knew what else was gone, but the
fine control was still there; and likewise their ability to brake: no
limping in; no lanes established yet: they were all see-and-avoid. Other signals came in.
Harn Station was back on output; and then Tyo, reporting minor
damage, minor casualties. Hilfy, Pyanfar kept
thinking; and Chur. And Khym: at the bottom of
her thoughts, Khym, for whom she had no hope. But that was what he had
come looking for, after all. A sweat prickled on her
nose. Breath came hard under the acceleration. The mahe traveled with
them, and for its own reasons and in its own purpose, the Outsider
ship came, outstripping slower insystem haulers for whom that voyage
was the work of hours. By the time they could get
there, Gaohn Station might have some reckoning of the casualties.
XIV The Pride opened accesses
while Mahijiru eased into dock beside her, and Jik's Aja Jin stood
watch toward that quarter of the system out of which some stray kif
might still come . . . not expected, but they took precautions. The Outsider ship came in
more slowly still, permitted docking, but having to accomplish it
without understanding the language, the procedures, and without
compatible equipment: "Beside us," Pyanfar had told them
simply. "You got vid? You see four grapples: airlock placed in
center, understand? You go slow, very careful. You have trouble, you
stop, wait, back off: small ship can come from station, help you
dock. All understood?" "Understand,"
the answer had come back through the translator. And the Outsider
arrived, cautiously . . . wondering, doubtless, at the holed
carcasses of kif ships nearby; at the signs of fire which pitted the
adjacent section of the station torus. Someone on the dock got a
direct line hooked up. "Captain," Geran cried, her eyes
shining amber. "Captain, it's Chur and Hilfy. They're there,
both of them!" "Huh," Pyanfar
said judiciously, because there was a docking Outsider chattering in
her other ear at the moment; but relief jellied her gut, so that she
heard very little of the Outsider's babble at all. She looked at her
crew, and at Tully, whose eyes had lighted at the news. "They're safe,"
he asked, "Chur and Hilfy?" "We're going out
there," Pyanfar said, thrusting back from the controls. "All
of us, by the gods." She stood up, remembered the tape they had
duped on the way in and pocketed it. "Come on." They came, off the bridge
and long-striding down the corridor, Tully too, rode down the lift
and marched out the lock. If there was eve1- a time for running for
joy, it was that last walk down the rampway; but
Pyanfar held herself to a sedate walk down the ramp, into the wide,
fire-scarred dock where ha stood with weapons. Chur and Hilfy and some of
the other Chanur -- o gods, Hilfy, with a bloodstained bandage round
her side and leaning on Chur who had one arm in a sling. They smiled,
in shape to do that, at least. Chur hugged Geran one-armed, and
Pyanfar took Hilfy by both shoulders to look at her. Hilfy was white
about the nose, with pain in the set of her mouth, but her ears were
up and her eyes were bright. "We got them,"
Hilfy said hoarsely. "Got behind them at the dockside while
others came through the core and pushed them out to us. And then I
think they got some kind of order because they went frantic to get to
their ships. That was the big trouble. One got away. The rest -- we
got." "Khym." Hilfy turned with some
evident stiffness, indicated a figure*, crouched against the far side
of the dock, small with distance "Na Khym got the one that got
me, aunt, thank the gods." "Hit them hand to
hand, he did," Chur said. "Said he never* could shoot worth
anything. He came across that dock and hi1 that kif, and gods, five
of them never more than singed his fur I don't think they ever saw a
hani of his size -- gods, it was something. They bailed out of cover
and we got the leftovers." Pyanfar looked, at once
proud and sad, at that quiet, with' drawn figure. Proud of what he
had done -- Khym, who had never been much for fighting -- and sad at
his state and his future. , Gods, if they could only
have killed him -- given him what her son had not had the grace to
give. . . . Or perhaps Kara had sensed
he could not kill him; it* Khym Mahn backed to the wall was a
different Khym indeed. "I'll see him,"
she said. "We're going to get you two to station hospital."
. "Begging pardon,"
Hilfy said, "station hospital's got its hands full. Rhean's got
someone hit bad; and Ginas Llun-she's none too good either; and a lot
of others." • "Hilan Faha,"
Chur said, "and her crew -- they're dead, captain. All of them.
They led the way in for the core break-through. They insisted to. I
think it was shame -- for the company they'd kept." "Gods look on them,
then," Pyanfar said after a moment. "The Tahar -- "
Hilfy said bitterly, "got Moon Rising out and ran for jump. Ran
for it. That's what they're saying on station. But the Faha wouldn't
go with them." "That'll be the end,"
Pyanfar said. "When that tale gets back to Enafy province, Kahi
Tahar and his lot won't show their faces in Chanur land or
elsewhere." "Hani," a mahen
voice bellowed, and here came Goldtooth and crew, a dozen
dark-furred, rifle-carrying mahendo'sat flooding toward them,
towering over them. Goldtooth grabbed Pyanfar's hand and crushed it
till claws reminded him to caution. He grinned and slapped her on the
shoulder. "Got number one help, what I tell you?" Hani were staring at this
mahe-hani familiarity. Her crew was. Pyanfar laid her ears back in
embarrassment, recalled then what they owed Goldtooth and his unruly
lot and pricked the ears up at once. More, she linked arms with the
tall mahe, and gave the hawkers on dockside something proper to stare
at. "Number one help," she said. "Got deal," said
Goldtooth. "Got friend Jik repair, same you get at Kirdu. Chanur
fix, a?" "Rot you -- " "Got deal" "Got," she
admitted, and suffered another slap on the shoulder. She looked at
Tully, thinking of Chanur balance sheets, debits and credits. Looked
at him looking at her with those odd pale eyes full of worship.
Behind him an accessway had opened. His own kind had come, gods, a
bewildering assortment, pale ones and dark ones and some shades in
between. "Tully," she said, signed with her eyes that he
should look, and he did. He froze for the instant,
then ran for them, hani-dressed and hani-looking, ran to his assorted
comrades, who were clipped and shaved and clothed top and bottom in
skintight garments shod besides. Hands reached out to him; arms
opened. He embraced them all and sundry and there was a babble of
alien language which echoed off the overhead. So he goes, Pyanfar
thought with a strange sadness -- and with a certain anxiety about
losing a valuable contact to others -- to Llun, by the gods, who
would be eager to get their own-claws in; and Kananm and Sanuum and
some of the other competitors in port. Pyanfar shed Goldtooth's arm
and crossed the dock toward the knot of humans, her own companions
following her. Tully brought his people at least halfway when he saw
her, came rushing up and grabbed her hand with fevered joy. "Friend," he
said, his best word, and dragged her reluctant hand toward that of a
white-maned human, whose naked face was wrinkled as a kif's and
tawny-colored like a hani's. The captain, she thought;
an old one. She suffered the handclasp with claws retracted, bowed
and got a courteous bow in return. Tully spoke in his own language,
rapidly, carrying some point -- indicated one after another of them
and said" their names his way -- Haral and Tirun, Geran and Chur
and Hilfy; and the mahendo'sat at least by species. "Want talk,"
Tully managed then. "Want understand you." Pyanfar's ears flicked and
lifted, the chance of profit within her reach after all. She puckered
her mouth into its most pleasant expression. Gods, some of them were
odd. They ranged enormously in size and weight and there were two
radically different shapes. Females, she realized curiously; if j
Tully was male, then these odd types were the women. "We talk,"
Goldtooth interposed. "Mahe make deal too." "Friend,"
Pyanfar told the humans in her best attempt at I human language.
Tully still had to translate it, but it had its effect. "I come
to your ship," she said, choosing Tully's small j hani
vocabulary. "Your ship. Talk." "I come too,"
Goldtooth said doggedly, not to be shaken. Tully translated. "Yes," Tully
rendered the answer, grinning. "Friend. All friend." "Deals like a mahe,"
Pyanfar muttered. But that arrangement was well enough with her. She
suddenly conceived plans -- for the further loan of two mahe hunter
ships on a profitable voyage. "Captain," Haral
said, touching her arm and calling her attention to a cluster of
figures coming out of the dockside corridor. Llun were on their way --
Kifas Llun herself in the lead of I that group, come to answer this
uncommon call at Gaohn Station, a score of black-trousered
officialdom trailing after her. They would demand the
translator tape, that was sure. Pyanfar thrust her hands into her
waistband. "Friends," she assured Tully, who gave the
approaching group anxious looks, and he in turn reassured his
comrades. "Hilfy," Pyanfar
said, "Chur, no need for you to stand through this. Go to the
ship. Geran, you go and take care of them, will you?" - "Right,"
Geran agreed. "Come on, you two." No protests from them.
Chur and Hilfy started away in Geran's keeping and Tully delayed them
to take their hands one by one as if he expected something might keep
him from further good-byes. Gods, she had no desire to
deal with the Llun or anyone at the moment. Her knees ached, her
whole body ached, from want of sleep and from strain. She felt a span
shorter than she had come across that blink from Kirdu.' They all
must. Tully too. She wanted --
She wanted to have time
... to talk to her own; to find out who else of Chanur was hurt; to
call Kohan. ... And somehow -- to talk to
Khym. To do something, anything for his misery, in spite of what
others thought and said. "Geran," she
called out at the retreating group. "Khym too. Get him aboard
and tend to him. Tell him I said so." A small flick of the ears.
"Aye," Geran said, and went off in Khym's direction while
Chur and Hilfy made their own way back. Pyanfar turned to the
arriving Llun with a dazzlingly cheerful smile, fished the tape from
her pocket and turned it over to Kifas at once with never a fade of
good humor. "We register these
good Outsiders, our guests, at Gaohn nation," Pyanfar said,
"under Chanur sponsorship." "Allies, her Chanur?"
There was a frown of suspicion on Kifas Llun's face. "Nothing
the Tahar said weighs here now with us ... but did you send for
them?" "Gods no. The knnn
did that. Knnn who got a bellyful of kif intervention in their space,
I'd guess; who found these Outsiders near their space and decided in
their own curious fashion to see to it that they met reputable
Compact citizens of a similar biology -- snatched them ,up in synch,
they did, and they took the hakkikt out the same way, may they have
joy of him. They're traders, you know, ker Llun, after their own
lights. I'll wager our human friends here don't know yet what's
happened to them or how far they are from home or how they got here.
They'll have drugged down and ridden out the jumps it took to get
them here; and gods know how many that was or from where." "Introduce us,"
the Llun said. "I'll remind you,"
Pyanfar said, "that we and they have gone through too many time
changes. We're not up to prolonged formalities. They're Chanur
guests; I'm sponsoring them and I feel it incumbent on myself to see
that they get their rest ... but of course they'll sign the
appropriate papers and register." "Introductions,"
the Llun said dryly, too old and too wise to be put off by that. "Tully," Pyanfar
said, "you got too rotted many friends."
It was what she expected,
grueling, a strain on everyone's good humor, and entirely over-long,
that visit to station offices. There was some restraint exercised, in
respect to family losses, in respect to frayed and lately high
tempers; in respect to the fact that for one time out of a hundred,
hani had worked together without regard to house and province, and
the cooperative spirit had not entirely faded. There was gratitude to
Goldtooth and the mahe ships who got station privileges and repair.
Gaohn Station was all too anxious to share the bill with Chanur,
aching to get Aja Jin into the hands of Harn Shipyards, to be studied
and analyzed during the course of the work. The mahendo'sat were
evidently satisfied with the situation -- smug bastards, Pyanfar
thought, bristling somewhat as all hani did, at the unhappy truth
that the mahendo'sat were always ahead of hani, that mahendo'sat
technology which had gotten them into space in the first place was
responsible for keeping them there. The mahendo'sat were apparently
ready for their allies to see the hunter-ships, at least. Rot the
Personage and his small fluff with him. Station was eager too for
a look at the human ship; and doubtless the humans entertained some
suspicions about that and everything else, but it was a fair question
what they had in their power to do about it. They were, at least for
the moment, effectively lost "We find home,"
Tully said, "not far from Meetpoint. Know this. Your record,
your ship instruments -- help us " "Not difficult at
all," Pyanfar said. "All we have to do is send your records
through the translator and get our charts together, right? We come up
with the answer in no time." "Mahendo'sat,"
Goldtooth said, "got number one good reckoning location human
space. Number one good charts." All too many friends
indeed, Pyanfar reflected.
Tully went to his own, not
without hugging her and Haral and Tirun, and shaking hands
energetically with Goldtooth and with Kifas Llun and others -- an
important fellow among his people now, this Tully, surely; a person
who knew things; a person with valuable and powerful friends. Good
for him, she thought, recalling the wretched, naked creature under
the pile of blankets in the washroom. She made the call to
Kohan, a quick' call -- her voice was getting hoarse and her knees
were shaking; but it was good to hear that things on the world had
settled down, that Kohan had gotten himself a good meal and that the
house was back in some order. While the world had been
under kif guns, they had tidied up the house, cooked dinner, and
started replanting the garden. Pyanfar lowered her ears at the
thought, how little real the larger universe was to downworld hani,
who had never thoroughly imagined what had almost happened to them;
who heard about the terrible damage to the station as they might hear
about some earthquake in a remote area of the globe, shaking their
heads in sympathy and regretting it, but not personally touched --
worried for their own kin, of course worried; and there would be
hugging and sympathy at homecoming. But they set the world in order
by replanting the garden and seeing Kohan fed. Gods look on them all. She went on the last of
her strength to the hospital, to visit the Chanur wounded, because
she was first in Chanur and it meant something to them; because she
owed courtesy to Rhean, who sat with her mending crewwoman; because
the news from home would do them good, these downworld Chanur not of
the ship crews, who understood the necessity of planting gardens. She checked with station
command, that the Rau had found a way back to their ship, which
another mail freighter had managed to secure for them. And then she and Haral and
Tirun walked the long way back to The Pride, all of them hoarse and
exhausted and finding the limit of their energy simply in putting one
foot in front of the other. She limped, realized she had somehow
broken a claw; thought with longing of a bath, and bed, and breakfast
when she should wake.
But on The Pride, one
thing more she did: she stopped by sick bay and looked in on Geran's
charges, found Hilfy and Chur comfortably asleep on cots jammed side
by side into the small compartment, and Geran drowsing in the chair
by the door. Geran woke as her shadow
crossed her face, murmured bleary-eyed apology. Pyanfar made a shrug.
Tirun and Haral looked in at the door, leaned there in the frame, two
worn ghosts. "Khym," Pyanfar
said, missing him. "Cot in the
washroom," Geran said. "By your leave, captain. He wouldn't
accept Hilfy's quarters, but she tried to insist." "Huh." She edged
through to see to Chur and Hilfy, saw their faces relaxed and their
sleep easy, walked out. "Orders?" Haral asked in apparent
dread: "Sleep," she said, and the sisters went their way
gladly enough. For herself, she walked on
down the corridor to the washroom and opened the door. Khym was safely tucked in
bed, nested in blankets on a comfortable cot. One eye was bandaged.
The other opened and looked at her, and he moved to sit up -- clean,
his poor ears plasmed together such as they could be, the terrible
scratches on his arms and shoulders treated. Patches of his coat were
gone where the scabs had been; his beard and mane were haggled up,
doubtless where snarls had had to be snipped out. "Better?" she
asked. "Ker Geran shot
enough antibiotics into me, I should live forever." Rueful humor. She sank
down on the end of the cot, refusing, as Khym refused, to abandon a
cheerful face on things. She patted his knee. "I hear you put a
wind up the kif s backs." He shrugged, flicked his
ears in deprecation. "You got your look at
station," she said. "What do you think of it?" Ears pricked up. "Worth
the seeing." "Show you the ship
when you and I get some sleep." "I can't stay up
here, you know. You're going to have to find me a shuttle down
tomorrow." "Why can't you stay
up here?" He gave a surprised
chuckle. "The Llun and others will say, that's who. Not many
lords as tolerant as na Kohan." "So station's their
territory. So, well. I thought you might consider taking a turn in
mine. On The Pride." "Gods, they'd -- " " -- do what? Talk?
Gods, Khym, if I can carry an Outsider male from one end of the
Compact to the other and come out ahead of it, I can rotted well
survive the gossip. Chanur can do anything it pleases right now. Got
ourselves a prize in this Outsider; got ourselves a contact that's
going to take years to explore. I can deal with Tully; and with the
mahendo'sat -- a whole new kind of deal, Khym. Who's to know -- if
you stay on the ship; who's to question -- when we're not in home
territory? What do you think the mahendo'sat care for hani customs?
Not a thing." "Na Kohan -- " "What's it to Kohan?
You're my business, always were; he let you stay on Chanur land,
didn't he? If he did that, he'd care less about you light years
absent on a Chanur ship. And right now, what I want -- Kohan's going
to have a lot of patience with." He was listening, ears up
and all but trembling. "Think so, do you?" "What's downworld got
to. offer you? Sanctuary? Huh. Think you'd go crazy on a ship?
Unstable? Make trouble with the crew?" "No," he said
after a moment. And then: "Oh, gods rot it, Pyanfar, you can't
do something like that." "Afraid, Khym?" Ears went down. "No.
But I have consideration for you. I know what you're trying to do.
But you can't fight what is. Time, Pyanfar. We get old. The young
have their day. You can't fight time." "We're born fighting
it." He sat silent a moment.
The ears came up slowly. "One voyage, if the crew doesn't
object. Maybe one." "Be a while in port,
getting our tail put back together again. Getting navigational
details worked out. Then we go out again. A long voyage, this time." He looked up under his
brow. "It's different out
there," she said. "Not hani ways. No one species' way.
Right and wrong aren't the same. Attitudes aren't. I'll tell you
something." She crooked a claw and poked it at him. "Hani
downworld want their houses and their ways unquestioned, that's all.
They don't ask much what we do while the goods come in and don't cost
outlandish much; they don't care what we do either, so long as we
don't visibly embarrass the house. Kara's going to be upset. But
he'll live with it... when The Pride's light years out of sight and
mind. Might start a fashion. Might." "Dreamer," Khym
said. "Huh." She got
up, flicked her ears and waited to see him settled again. She walked
out then, weaving a bit in her steps and figuring she had about
strength enough to get to her own cabin and her own bath and her own
bed, in that order.
Tully came and went, among
his human comrades, and on The Pride. He did not, to Pyanfar's
surprise, cut his mane and shave his beard and walk about in human
clothes: he did go shod, but no more change than that. For the sake of
appearances, she thought; in respect of her one-time advice and the
opinion of the Llun (and of Chanur too, that brief time they paid a
downworld visit, to afford Kohan time with his favored daughter and a
view of their sponsored guests). Tully flourished -- grinned and
laughed and moved with a spring in his step quite strange in him. He
brought a solemn trio of humans off their ship to take notes aboard
The Pride -- Goldtooth attended with his own records -- to ask
questions and to exchange data until they had some navigational
referents in common. They frowned suspiciously,
these humans, but they stopped frowning when they learned precisely
where home was -- some distance beyond knnn space and kif. "Got between,"
Tully said enthusiastically, jabbing the chart which showed hani and
mahendo'sat territory, cupping one hand on the hani-mahendo'sat side
and one hand on the human side, with the kif neatly between. The
hands moved together slowly, clenched. "So." So, so, so, Pyanfar
thought, and her lips drew back and her nose wrinkled cheerfully. In time, he went, back to
his own . . . that last sealing of the lock which marked the
separation of the human ship from Gaohn. Ulysses, its name was, which
Tully had said meant Far-Voyages. Nearly fifty humans lived on it,
and whether they were related or not, she could not determine. They prepared to go. She
started back across the docks to The Pride, to follow -- with a
smallish cargo, nothing of great mass, but items of interest to
humans. There might be a chance to see Tully at voyage's end, but it
would hardly be the same. He belonged with his own, that was what,
and she did not begrudge him that. She planned to have use of
that acquaintance, Tully -- and the captain of this Far-Voyages. So,
of course, did Goldtooth, with his sleek refitted ship, going with
them, while Jik carried messages back to the Personage, no doubt, and
the mahendo'sat tried to figure out how to cheat an honest hani out
of exclusive arrangements. But the odds in that
encounter were even.
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