"Andre Norton - Hosteen Storm 03 - Beast Master's Circus - with Lyn McConchie 2.0" - читать интересную книгу автора (Norton Andre)Since the dreaded Xik
destroyed Earth, the corps of Beast Masters and the animal teams
with which they have telepathic rapport have served as sentinels
against the Xik and other threats to colony worlds throughout the
galaxy. Now a conspiracy with ties
to the Thieves Guild is trying to kidnap the Beast Masters' team
animals. On one world after another, they are attacking Beast
Masters and targeting their animals, leaving a trail of dead or
wounded Beast Masters and their animals in their wake. They
haven't yet succeeded in capturing one alive ... but they are
still trying, and they're becoming more desperate—and bolder. Laris is a young woman who
works for a space-faring circus, a bonded slave to its manager.
An orphan with a troubled past, Laris is gifted with animals, a
valuable asset to the circus and to her boss. But she's learned
that somehow there's a connection between him and the Thieves
Guild, and also the attempted abductions of Beast Masters'
animals. She also knows that if her boss finds out what she has
discovered, it would make her a problem, and he usually disposes
of problems. When the circus lands on
Arzor, home to Beast Masters Hosteen and Tani Storm, Laris feels
a kinship to them and to Hosteen's family, the Quades. She
realizes, however, that she may be endangering them by exposing
them to the dark interest of her boss and his ill-intentioned
friends. Hosteen and Tani like Laris, too, as does Logan Quade.
She would give anything to tell them her dangerous secret but
cannot. Because she knows that her friendship with the Beast
Masters could be their downfall, as well as her own! Andre
Norton, named a
Grand Master by the Science Fiction Writers of America and the
recipient of a Life Achievement World Fantasy Award, is the
author of more than one hundred novels of science fiction and
fantasy adventure. Beloved by legions of readers the world over,
she has thrilled generations with such series as Beast Master,
Time Traders, The Solar Queen, Witch World, and others.
She continues to write, and presides over a unique writers'
resource, High Hallack, in Murfreesboro, Tennessee. Visit her Web
site at www.andre-norton.org. Lyn
McConchie is
the author, with Andre Norton, of Beast Master's Ark and
other novels, as well as her own fiction. A native of New
Zealand, she has been awarded the Sir Julius Vogel Award for Best
Science Fiction or Fantasy Novel of 2002 by a New Zealander, for
Beast Master's Ark. BEAST MASTER'S
CIRCUS Andre Norton And Lyn McConchie This is a work of fiction.
All the characters and events portrayed in this novel are either
fictitious or are used fictitiously. BEAST MASTER'S
CIRCUS Copyright © 2004 by Andre Norton and Lyn
McConchie All rights reserved,
including the right to reproduce this book, or portions thereof,
in any form. This book is printed on
acid-free paper. Edited by James
Frenkel A Tor Book Published by Tom Doherty
Associates, LLC 175 Fifth Avenue New York, NY
10010 www.tor.com Tor® is a registered trademark of Tom
Doherty Associates, LLC. Library of Congress
Cataloging-in-Publication Data Norton, Andre. Beast master's circus /
Andre Norton and Lyn McConchie.—1st ed. p. cm. "A Tom Doherty Associates
book." ISBN
0-765-30042-7 1. Storm, Hosteen
(Fictitious character)—Fiction. 2. Human-animal
communication—Fiction. 3. Life on other
planets—Fiction. 4. Circus
performers—Fiction. 5. Space
colonies—Fiction. I. McConchie, Lyn,
1946—II. Title. PS3527.O632B57
2004 813'.52—dc22 2003060697 First Edition: February
2004 Printed in the United States
of America 0987654321 Dedication To the cats whose lives have
enlivened my own reading for so many years. To Midnight Louie,
and Carole Nelson Douglas. To Koko and Yum Yum, and Lilian Jackson
Braun. To Solomon, Sheba, Sealy, ShebaLu, and Saska, and
Doreen Tovey; and to the many cats, real and fictional, of Andre Norton
(Chang-Un in particular). May they find Prauo a worthy
successor. —L.M. Acknowledgments To Jim Frenkel, Tor editor,
who edited this book with considerable patience despite dealing
with an author who can't spell or punctuate, and has no
computer-savvy whatsoever. Thanks. To the computer-repair firm
of StanCo, who rushed out several times to fix my printer on the
spot so I could produce this work. Thanks, Stan and
Andrew. And to the one, the only,
the ubiquitous, Premier Ocispot Tigerman—my Ocicat—on some of whose traits and
abilities I based the character of Prauo, and without whose
loving assistance this work would have probably been finished a
lot sooner. Thanks, guys, I couldn't
have done it without you. Chapter One Laris crouched over the new
animal. It was gasping for breath still, but that would not last
long. The shock of its injuries and the pain of losing what meant
most to it were draining both its strength and will to live. Even
as she worked, it gave one final, long, slow breath—and as that was released so was
the poor beast's life. She felt tears come to her eyes. She'd
tried. She had. But that would buy her nothing from those who
employed her. Nor did it. A moment later a
whip sang, the lash burned across her thin shoulders, and she
cried out, twisting away. "Dedran, no! I did my best.
I can't work miracles." She glared up at him. "If
your people brought me anything but damaged goods mind-broken by
the way they were taken, I might have a chance." The Circus Master glared
down. Dedran was a lean, hard-looking man. His hair was that odd
shade of blond that looked almost white but his skin was a
weathered brown. He'd fought with the Ishan forces until his
planet was destroyed almost five years earlier. What he'd been
before that no one knew—although they made guesses which
could well have been right. Dedran had never given
anyone the impression he was rigidly honest. The Ishan forces had
not cared, their leader had taken the man in to fight, not to
attend league meetings. In fact, Dedran had been a criminal
already allied with the rising Thieves Guild. He was a clever man
with ideas. One of which had been that it was safer to be given a
weapon and encouraged to fight against the Xik than to hide
without arms and wait to be slaughtered. He'd bided his time,
survived the destruction of his world, and made sure of some very
portable and valuable loot as he escaped the ruins of his
planet. He'd set up the circus after
Ishan. Spent the two years before the war ended sorting out acts
and people to work for him. He seemed to have enough money to do
it without problems. Within the circus though there were hints
that he owned only a part of it—that others had funded the
business as a cover. Laris could believe that. The circus had
swept her up four years ago. She'd been a starving refugee from
one of the worlds cleared by the Xik, or so she believed. She'd
been barely twelve, and remembered little of her first years. The
years after the loss of her home had been filled with dimly
recalled moves: being bundled into a ship and dumped on another
world with no more than the clothes she stood up in and her
mother, who wept. She thought she might have been four or five
then. Another move and another, and her mother was gone. Another
and still yet another until at last she was twelve and in a camp
with many others, none of whom she knew and most of whom spoke
other languages or the one-speech with strange accents. She'd
fought first to survive, then to escape, sensing that if she
stayed within the camp she would become as hopeless as
they. Laris had a keen
intelligence but had learned enough by the time she was alone to
hide much of what she knew. She looked younger than her true age
and could appear younger still. People were more careless around
a child—both with talk and small
change. She'd found part-time
employment in a pet shop run by an old man. He wasn't unkind but
he expected a full day's work for his credits. Sometimes the work
was almost too much for the light-boned, underfed girl but she
always managed. She loved the beasts, and when he saw how well
they responded to her the owner gave her more responsibility.
Then he died and her way of escape appeared closed. There were other roads open
but none that she would willingly take. At twelve she appeared to
be only nine or ten, and in any great city there was a market for
that. Had she agreed, there were several, including Mercer, the
camp boss, who'd have found her employment. Laris was small and
appeared fragile. Yet for all that she showed promise of becoming
not so much pretty as elegant. Her movements were graceful, her
cap of dark hair complemented the dark brown of her eyes, and her
skin was a warm, creamy, faintly olive shade. Her manner was
self-contained and she unbent to few. Why bother? Camp after camp
had swept away her mother, her memories, and any earlier friends
she had made. Now she walked alone but for the one friend she'd
kept these past few years. Prauo, whom she cherished and trusted,
loved as she'd had none to love for so long. Dedran was back. "Don't sit
there dreaming, you fool. Get that carcass cleaned up, take
samples for me, and make sure no one will find it afterward." He
turned to leave, then swung back. "Your cat, he'll be well enough
to perform tonight?" "Yes—at least—here?" Dedran smiled hungrily.
"Elsewhere, a climb maybe." Laris considered. Prauo had
been ill from another growth spurt but he was recovering. "So
long as the climb isn't too exhausting and he can rest once it's
done." Her employer nodded. "It's a
straight job. If you and the cat do it well I may even
toss you a half credit or two." He laughed and strolled away,
ignoring the look Laris gave him. Even after four years she
sometimes wondered how well she'd done to sign on with Dedran's
Circus. But she'd had to get out of the camp. With the pet shop
owner's death her one obvious avenue of escape had
closed. She'd despaired; then
Mercer, the camp boss, had come to her smiling and she'd cringed.
It meant no good for someone when the boss of the camp grinned so
cheerfully. But, incredibly, it had meant good for her. He'd
towered over her, smirking down. "You Laris? The one who's
good with animals?" She'd nodded. Mercer nodded back. "You don't
look like much. Maybe that's an advantage. Come with me." She
followed, hiding the inward sneer at his pretense of not knowing
her. He'd remembered her well enough last year when he'd wanted
her to accept work in a city place. He'd thought she looked like
a lot then, a lot of credits. Now what did he have in
mind? He'd taken her to Dedran.
Both men had eyed her coldly. "This! You reckon this miserable
thing'll be any use to me?" Mercer nodded. "She's been
working in old man Plaistrin's shop the last year. He told me
once she was real good with the beasts. He was considering a
contract. Reckon he'd a done it if'n he hadn't died." Laris felt
her heart jump. So near to escape and the old fool had to go and
die. But what was she doing here, another job with
animals? Dedran snorted. "All right.
I'll test her. If she passes I'll take her on." He smiled
viciously. "Five-year bond and you get the bond money. I suppose
she's yours to bond?" Mercer looked at her and
Laris understood. In the camp there was always talk; some escaped
it in various ways, and sometimes they returned to see friends or
family. From them and their tales she had learned all she could
about conditions of freedom. What it meant to be bonded. If she
were ever in that position she must know what she would receive
and what she could legally ask for. Here and now she could speak
out. Deny that Mercer had the right to give a bond for her.
Dedran would walk away and once she was back in the camp, she'd
pay. But if she agreed she might have hope. She'd be out of the
camp, employed even if she was under bond. After five years she
could leave with an honorably canceled contract saying she'd had
a good job these past five years. Or she might be able to stay,
with a new contract and good pay if she'd proved her
worth. Better yet, under bond she
must be decently fed. Given respectable clothing. A bond-servant
could not be summarily judged or too badly beaten. There were
always those who'd use too clear evidence of abuse against the
abuser. None of these things were hers in the camp; she'd be
better off bonded. She'd looked up innocently.
"Yes, Honored Sir, the Noble Mercer can sell me if'n he wishes. I
work hard an' I'm good with the beasts." "You'll sign the
bond?" "I'll sign," Laris agreed.
And she had. In front of an overstuffed pompous official, whom
she guessed was collecting his share of the money. He'd attested
that she appeared to be sixteen. Laris knew that for a lie, but
she had to be sixteen for the bond so she signed where she was
told and agreed when she was asked, that yes, she was sixteen
years old. After that she went with the
two men to a building. She could feel her nerves tightening as
they approached the door. It was possible that the talk of
animals had been a trick. That Mercer had sold her for another
purpose. But the smell as they entered reassured her, as did the
animal sounds which rose in the rank air. Mercer led them to a
cage at the back. He gestured at the inhabitant. "Lereyne tigerbat. The
brute's gone into a decline and I paid high. Get in there and
rouse it, make it eat." Laris sucked in a silent
breath and bit down on a grin. The tigerbat had a very nasty
reputation on its home world which was quite justified. Tigerbat
swarms had stripped humans to the bone in minutes, even through
reinforced clothing. In swarm, the beasts had no fear and would
continue the attack despite heavy losses. Lereyne settlers had
almost wiped them out over three generations and now they were
seldom seen, although the stories remained. But somewhere along the
line, she didn't quite recall where or when, she'd learned to
read. Old Plaistrin had owned quite a library on other-world
beasts. He'd loved to talk too, and he'd been both fond of his
merchandise and knowledgeable. She'd read and listened, soaked up
everything she could. She knew something about the tigerbats. She
glanced around. The two men shifted to block her path and she
snorted. "I'm not trying to run. I
want a brush." Dedran looked blank. "A
brush? What kind of brush?" "A grooming brush," Laris
snapped. She saw one tossed on the top of another cage and
reached. Dedran allowed it. With the brush secured she turned
back and looked at the door. "Am I supposed to walk
through plasteel bars or something?" Dedran's look halted Mercer
even as he snarled and drew back his fist. "No, I want to see
this. If she's as good as she thinks she is I want her in one
piece." He swung the door open and
his eyes were amused. "In you go, Gracious Lady. You leave once
that brute has eaten—you or its food, I don't much
care which." Laris ignored him, stepping
quietly toward the huddled animal. It whimpered quietly in its
sleep. Tigerbats were swarm animals. To keep one alone was to
watch it die of loneliness, something Dedran appeared to be
unaware of. Moving slowly and quietly Laris swept the brush down
the matted fur. She worked gently, untangling the long pelt,
grooming until the tigerbat lifted its head to stare at her. Then
she took up a piece of the meat. The tigerbat opened its mouth,
revealing the massive fangs within. But the feeling it gave off
to her was one of pleasure. One had come to relieve its solitary
state. One who groomed the matted fur as a swarm member
should. As the men waited she fed
the animal until it had eaten enough. She knew she must not
overfeed one which had not eaten well in too long. She returned
to the grooming while the tigerbat lay there blinking blissfully.
When she stood it moved to cling to the bars, wings furled over
its narrow shoulders. Yellow eyes watched her
hopefully. She patted it. "Don't worry.
I'll be back, I think." Dedran nodded at her before turning to
Mercer. He counted out credits into the camp boss's eager
palm. "She'll do." The camp boss hurried away,
leaving Dedran to look at Laris. "You know animals, it seems.
What else do you know?" "I can read an' write,"
Laris told him, watching his surprise. "I work hard. And I can
keep my mouth shut an' my eyes an' ears open." Dedran grinned briefly, a
mere twist of his thin lips. "Then you may do well here. What do
you read?" "Books about animals. So's I
can learn more about them." He nodded thoughtfully.
"I've got no objections to that. Do your work and when it's done
you can access the library." Dedran had been as good as
his word. In the last four years Laris had read freely, more
freely than her master had known. There were ways to earn a
credit or two as the circus traveled. And ways on-planet to
untraceably access information once one had those credits. With
the war over, Dedran had purchased an old cargo ship, packed his
beasts and staff within, and upped ship. Laris guessed he had
other reasons beyond the claimed one of bringing entertainment to
the human-settled planets. Sometimes they stopped so briefly they
could manage only a handful of sold-out shows. Clearly they could
have stayed at a profit, but they moved on. At other times they
played to half-or quarter-filled houses and must have lost money,
but they remained several weeks. It wasn't a large circus. There
were some thirty beasts, many which were no bigger than a Terran
dog. In fact, they had two of those who did an act with two
Trastorian carra. Later the carra did a clown act with their
trainer and the dogs often joined that as well. Dedran saw to it that mostly
the animals were decently fed, housed, and well-treated. On her
own initiative Laris had taught herself and the carra a trapeze
act. Dedran had been pleased with that and her hard work, so he
rarely struck her. He wasn't as kind to the forty or so people
who worked for him. Often they left when and as they could, and
were quickly replaced. Some seemed merely to vanish with no prior
word of their intent to depart. Laris had swiftly seen that
some of those who left were the ones who talked too much, who
nosed into Dedran's business. But not always. Once they began to
travel there were frequently people who'd do anything to escape
their world. Dedran would take them on, for a trip to the next.
By that time they had to have worked out a dangerous act to
perform. On the new world they would be expected to appear twice
a day. Most took too many risks and died or were crippled. They
would be left behind when the circus moved on. But it was good business.
The crowds came to watch someone die. Dedran took them on without
pay until they had proved themselves. There were always two or
three on the ship working hard between planets to earn a place.
Over four years many of his staff had come and gone. Some others
left because they would not bow to Dedran's blows. Laris had no
option in that, so she remained. But the blows weren't that
regular, and the food was good, the provided clothing
respectable. The girl had grown and filled out. Still others came
and went and she made no real friends. Laris knew only one other
who'd been there longer than she. That one approached her
now. "Did we lose it?" His foot
stirred the stiffening body. Her voice was steady. "Of
course. It was too damaged to survive." "Yes. A pity. We needed
it." Neither said more but both
understood that the damage mentioned had not been that to body
alone. He took a container from his pocket and drank. The scent
of oranges drifted to her; Laris kept silent. If Cregar wanted to
preserve himself in Naranje that was his decision. Dedran never
seemed to care. And for all he drank—and it was a lot—Cregar never became less than
stolidly taciturn before others. Once she'd tried to talk to
him. She'd been with Dedran only a few months, and watching
Cregar she'd guessed he'd had training with animals. She'd asked
about it and he'd turned to look at her, a terrible stare
compounded of such rage and pain she'd never asked again. Over
the years she'd watched him and wondered. He seemed to have no
connection with beasts, no desire to touch or love, yet he knew
the way they thought and would react. He was capable of training
them to do things which appeared impossible. He'd trained many of the
animals they had now. And unlike humans, the animals did not hate
or fear him. This new one had been brought in after midnight.
Cregar had dumped it in a sack by her tent and woken her to tend
it. He'd been a little drunk and a lot angry. He muttered about
stupid fools who couldn't obey a simple order. Then he'd snarled
at her to do what she could, and stamped away. She'd lost the
fight. She ignored him as he stood drinking. She had to take the
samples of tissue Dedran had ordered. She took them gently,
mourning over the body. Cregar was often away,
traveling ahead of the circus. When he met up with them again he
often brought a new beast. Those he brought rarely survived their
abduction and always it was her job to care for them, take
samples when they died. In her reading she'd come
across word of beast masters. Those who had the gift of
communication with animals. Terra had taken and trained the human
halves of the teams, and had bred genetically altered beasts to
match with the chosen humans. Laris suspected Cregar might
have been a beast master once. What had happened, she did not
know. She knew only that now he seemed always to be in pain, not
of body but of mind. Both she and her cat could sense it dimly
whenever Cregar was around. She finished taking her samples and
struggled to lift the beast. The circus had a simple method of
disposal. The ship's engines were
typical of older freighters. They had no real speed but were far
cheaper to run than the newer models. Ideal for a circus with its
tons of litter each day. They would run on any form of matter fed
to them. This carcass would become atoms just as soon as she
reached the ship. Laris suspected that a few people had gone the
same way. She was sure she would have been one had she failed to
pass the tigerbat test and been killed. Cregar walked away. She
glared after him. If he must steal these beasts couldn't he at
least see to it that his hirelings took more care? Bad enough
being snatched from their human, to whom they were bonded deeply.
But this one had been brutally struck about the head and would
likely not have survived those injuries. Nor had it wished to.
She'd felt its pain, the emptiness, and guessed Cregar's men had
killed the human. She swore bitterly under her breath as she
carried the body to the ship. According to her reading the
beast master teams were few and far between. Maybe fifty had been
trained at first. Another dozen or so in training had broken free
before the final Xik thrust which had left Terra a smoking
cinder. Most of the trained teams had perished in the hard
fighting shortly before that time. But even the partly trained
teams were bonded. That intimate emotional and mental connection
was set before the physical training began. In fact, with the later
teams the bond had been set far more deeply than with those first
used. It was an experiment which, Laris felt, had been folly. The
novice teams were bonded until death, but they lacked the
military training which would help them resist Cregar's attack.
Thus it was that Cregar targeted them, but also for that reason
that he lost beast after beast to the trauma of its master's
death. She shivered as she placed
the animal in the matter chamber and activated the turntable.
Dedran was determined to have live beasts from such a team. They
had proved over and over that they could not use beasts from the
trainee teams. She was afraid she could guess where his eyes
would turn next. But surely there were none left of the trained
teams which had fought and mostly died for Terra. Behind her Dedran spoke.
"Prepare for departure, girl. I won't be needing you and the cat
after all. Get the cages in. We up ship tonight." "We have a show booked for
tonight. They'll talk if we cancel." She paused then added, "Do
we want talk and attention drawn to us?" His eyes narrowed
thoughtfully. "True. All right. Start preparing after the show.
We'll leave tomorrow morning as soon as we're packed
up." For a moment Laris wondered
if this was the time to jump ship. But it wasn't a good planet on
which to take that chance. Lereyne would be better. In her mind
another's eyes opened and looked out on the bleak, chill
landscape. Agreement came. There was always time to consider. But
to act hastily could mean unnecessary suffering. As she bustled about making
ready for the show and then departure, Laris allowed that other
to see through her eyes. Cregar didn't know how far they had come
since Laris had found a tiny, shivering, starving cub three years
gone on a world far off the beaten track. She'd taken the poor
beast in, cared for him, loved him, and then found in him growing
abilities which mixed strangely with the girl who loved him.
Nowadays Prauo and Laris were useful to Dedran. The circus boss
had many irons in the fire. They'd taken minute tissue samples
from Prauo several times; Laris had been forced to permit that.
But she smiled secretly on overhearing Dedran's rage. "They can't produce
anything. Damned beast we grow ends up mindless over and over.
And it doesn't grow larger." He'd ranted on and Laris had slipped
away in silence. After that she'd carefully
hidden other advances between herself and her friend. After his
last growth spurt some eighteen months back Prauo had begun to be
able to use her eyes. Not merely a bond, but a direct linkage.
Shortly thereafter Laris had found she could do the same and see
what the young cat saw. It had enabled them to please Dedran to a
larger extent and he would suffer no interference by others in
case his valuable asset was damaged beyond further
use. Laris did her show in the
first half of the performance, a flamboyant turn on the trapeze
with the carra. The act was half serious, half clowning, always
skilled, and greeted as ever by loud laughter. Then she changed
into a boy's costume and disguise to enter the tigerbat cage.
Dedran had found four more of the creatures in the intervening
years but her special friend was the oldest and largest of the
tigerbats. He ruled the miniature swarm. As part of her act they
acted out a tiny play of a lad who found one of the creatures
trapped and aided it. He was then rescued in turn when a swarm
struck. Throughout her act there were gasps and cries from the
audience. She finished, sent the tigerbats from the center cage,
and turned to bow deeply. The applause was generous and Dedran
nodded approvingly as he passed her. She'd been an excellent
investment. Laris watched as he ran
lightly into the ring. She knew what he'd thought. She made sure
he felt that way by keeping her head down, working hard, and
being utterly discreet. What he did not know didn't hurt him. He
did know of the small amount of quarter and half credits she had
hidden in her cabin. Dedran would not have been pleased to learn
that she had a far larger stack of credits saved about which he
knew nothing. Enough to keep her and Prauo for many months at the
subsistence level of most worlds should she decide to
flee. He'd have been still less
pleased to know that she read as widely as she did. She regularly
invested a credit here and there in unmonitored library access.
Using her reading, overheard comments, newscasts, and the work
Dedran sometimes required of Laris and her cat, she'd started to
build a theory—that Dedran worked for the Thieves
Guild. The war and destruction of two planets, the devastation of
many others, had not been good for guild profits. And even worse had been the
patrol, a neutral force to monitor human-settled worlds and
crewed often by ex-military and survey officers. It had been
started soon after the human race had exploded outward. When war
began it had been scaled back. In the three years since war's end
though, it had grown again, and with such a reputation that even
some worlds with races other than human asked for the patrol's
intervention at times. As a result a trickle of people of other
races were being accepted for patrol training. And the patrol did
not like the Thieves Guild. Laris changed to her
ordinary clothing, spent time with Prauo, and then left
reluctantly. She must begin the pulldown. She got it started but
managed to disappear long enough to access a newscast. Her mouth
stretched in an unpleasant grin. No wonder Dedran had tried to
call off tonight's performance. The headlines were screaming
about a murder. Since the murdered man had
been not only an ex-beast master trainee but also the nephew of a
very influential member of the government, the local surface
patrol were out in force. Laris slid through the crowd and
returned to her work thinking hard. She dared not let those here
find the tissue samples. She'd be implicated. Dedran and Cregar
would bribe their way free and up ship. She'd be the one left and
blamed. But she could not allow
Dedran to know that she knew of the hunt. Nor could she hide the
samples in any place which might alert him that she had other
hiding places he had not found. She drifted onto the ship
unobtrusively, retrieved the samples, and placed them on the
matter turntable under a heap of cage cleanings. Then she went
back to her work. It was close to dawn when spaceport security
descended upon the Queen of the Circus. Whoever Dedran
usually paid off, it hadn't worked this time. They began at the entry port
and worked forward using some instrument which they clearly
expected would tell them if anything was to be found. Laris
glanced at Dedran. His face was blank but his body language, to
one who'd known him four years, bordered on desperation. He
caught her eye questioningly. She allowed her lip to curl a
fraction in reply. His tense posture slacked a fraction as he
nodded at her. She relaxed. Good. He'd
accept the samples' destruction. It was what he wanted, given
this over-thorough search. She opened the tigerbat cage as
requested, persuaded the four to move to a second enclosure while
security began to check the first cage. The fifth tigerbat caught
her tiny hand signal. He spun on wing-knuckles and fled down the
corridor. She raced in pursuit. They spun past the engine-room
door; she slowed, glanced back, good, they were out of sight for
a few seconds. Her hand shot out, palmed the door ajar, pressed a
switch, and thumbed the door shut again. Then she was back into their
view and she moved up, cornering the animal at the end of the
corridor. She pretended to strike him several times while he
uttered pitiful cries. It was part of one of their acts and he
trusted her. He cowered as he had been taught. Laris led him back
to his cage. Security got to the matter chamber and found what
they had found elsewhere—nothing. Laris breathed out. Their
machine could find no trace of samples, now only component atoms.
She watched them leave, Dedran ushering them politely. She'd have
to admit what she'd done but she thought he'd accept the loss of
samples at this time. Chapter Two Dedran was coldly furious,
but not at Laris. His anger was reserved for those who'd taken
his money and failed to keep port security from his ship. He'd
lost the samples, and worse, the authorities were still
suspicious of him even though nothing had been found. He raged at
Cregar in a corner where only the girl could overhear. "You deadglow, I wanted the
man knocked out, unconscious, not killed. That way we could have
had a live beast." Cregar's voice was cold.
"Don't be more stupid than you can help, Dedran. He was a beast
master. Alive, you couldn't have hidden one of his animals from
him anywhere. That's what being a beast master is." "You could have left him
injured. Head injuries would have stopped that." Cregar snorted. "Fer Crats
sake, Dedran. Injuries would have stopped it so long as he was
sick. His uncle would likely have been even quicker to start
searching with a half-dead nephew urging him on. And I can tell
you somethin' else the doctors here would have told Uncle. That
the boy would get better faster if the animal was found. And if
we killed it and just took samples once they started searching,
the boy would have felt it die. He'd have gone crazy. So don't
call me names. You were the one who insisted we try here. I told
you it was risky." Laris saw Dedran glance
around; she shrank back further into the tigerbat den. "Sure it
was risky." Dedran's voice was lowered. "But you know who gives
the orders. Want to argue with them?" Cregar's reply was brief.
"No." "Right, then we try Lereyne.
There's one of the original lot there. He was left with only two
of his team and he recently lost a beast in some accident. The
boss says we try now, before he loses the last one. There's
another on Arzor and we do that next." "Isn't that gonna be a touch
obvious? Our ship lands on Meril and a beast master gets killed.
Our ship lands on Lereyne, and a beast master's animal gets
snatched." It was Dedran's turn to
snort. "No one's that stupid except you." He was half turned from
Cregar as he spoke. He saw nothing, but Laris, peeping from the
den saw the other man's face. If that was her, she wouldn't be
talking to Cregar like that. The man was a killer and right now
he'd like to kill Dedran. She drew back deeper into the den. If
either knew that she was listening, her life wouldn't be worth a
tenth credit. Dedran continued. "The guild
says that with all the fuss on Meril there's been a plan change.
We go to Arzor for a few shows, get the lay of the land there.
We'll go on to Trastor and set down there for a couple of months.
We'll skip Lereyne until afterward." Cregar nodded slowly. "And I
go solo to Lereyne and Arzor and use local talent to help with
the snatches." "Smart man, you got it. And
just so's the trail breaks, you leave when we lay over at Port
Bhaiat on Yohal for a couple of days." He turned to leave. "An'
this time do a proper job. No deaders behind you; in, out, and
off-planet while the local yokels are still sucking their
thumbs." Laris drew back as far as
she could, putting her eye to a crack in the den wall. Dedran
walked away; Cregar was looking after him with a thoughtful look
on his face. Laris had seen that kind of look in the camps. It
was the slow, careful consideration of one predator wondering if
he could, or if the time was ripe yet to take a competing
predator down. She shivered. In her mind eyes opened and watched
Cregar with her. A thought formed. *He waits. He may challenge
when he returns if he has succeeded. That way he will bring good
news to sweeten Dedran's death.* Laris was stunned. The touch
of the mind was familiar but not the blurred mix of picture and
emotion she usually experienced *Prauo?* A feeling of laughter. *Who
else, sister-without-fur?* The presence was gone again and she
blinked. After that she hurried
through her chores and returned to her cabin. Prauo lay along one
of the two bunks, great purple eyes surveying her with calm
amusement. For a moment as Laris stood in the doorway it was as
if the sight of him was new again. She admired the sharply
delineated black-on-gold markings. Prauo's body was gold, lean,
with long, thick fur. His face, tail, and legs were sheathed in
shorter black fur and light purple eyes looked from the black
mask of his face fur. When Laris had found him
he'd been the size of a half-grown Terran kitten. She'd assumed
that's what he was, some mutant coloration of one anyhow. Four
months he'd remained unchanged, then he'd taken to her bunk and
appeared ill for several days. But during those same days he'd
eaten and grown hugely. By the time that spurt of growth had
halted he was some thirty pounds, long and lean with developing
muscles and claws of which no tigerbat would be
ashamed. The second development had
been unobtrusive: the ability to look through her eyes and allow
her to see through his. That, she had been able to hide from
Dedran and Cregar. The next growth spurt had again put weight on
him. He'd attained a little over fifty pounds. And to her
amusement he could slide through almost any small gap by flexing
his shoulders together. Dedran had found a use for that, and for
the odd sucker-pads which had opened from small round growths on
each of Prauo's mid-leg joints. The cat could climb even an
overhanging plascrete or clearplas wall, and could slide through
small gaps. He was intelligent enough to bring back anything of
which he'd been shown a picture, just so long as he was bringing
it back to Laris. She'd obeyed Dedran's orders on that. It was
safer and it allowed them to build up their small savings. A
Dedran pleased was a man who tossed her the odd half credit, a
handful of quarter or tenth credits. It was these she saved in an
obvious hiding place. But the first time Prauo had
been out with her he'd also brought back a cheek-pouch filled
with full credits found while he hunted the item he'd been shown.
He didn't find the coins every time, but often enough to build
her savings to a respectable sum. And now, with Prauo's loot from
that first haul, was hidden a rag-wrapped bundle of small pieces
of jewelry. Nothing too large, too valuable. All unidentifiably
mass-produced but easily sellable by a girl who appeared
respectable and without bringing suspicion down on
her. That was something else
Dedran had not discovered, that Prauo had cheek-pouches which he
could keep tightly shut. He could eat and drink without revealing
the items carefully stowed. The first time it happened Laris had
been both surprised and amused. The big cat had shown nothing,
returned with her, accepted food and drink while Dedran examined
the stolen item with smug approval and then dismissed her. Once
back in their cabin Prauo had made odd retching motions and
deposited seven credits on her bed. After that he rarely
returned from one of their forays without offering her some small
gift. She'd examined the pouches. They weren't large but they
would hold a small Astran apple at need. Laris often wondered
what purpose they served. She'd never seen Prauo use them except
when they were out with Dedran. But they hardly could have
appeared for that purpose. She looked at the big cat now and
moved to sit by him, her hand scratching around his ears as he
purred. "So you've found something
else you can do." It hit her then like a blow. He'd spoken in her
mind. He'd been Prauo, her friend whom she loved. But he wasn't
just a cat, he was an intelligent being. Her hand halted, fingers
buried in the thick fur as she stared down at him. He looked up,
purple eyes meeting her dark brown ones. He yawned widely, teeth
closing with the snick of a steel trap. "Prauo?" Her voice shook.
Was he still her friend or would he change now, see her as
unimportant? His head thrust hard against
her. *Never, sister-without-fur. We are kin. My life is yours.
And besides,* the mind voice was warm with amusement. *How well
do you think we should do if you appeared with me at some human
office to say that this animal who lives in the circus is an
intelligent being? That it should have citizen's rights? Better
that Dedran and Cregar do not know. In time one shall come who
will understand and listen. Until then let us wait and be
silent.* Laris covered one of his
paws with her hands. "That's smart. But listen, brother-with-fur.
Do you remember anything now? Where you came from, how come I
found you?" *Nothing. Only terror, then
cold and hunger. So cold, so alone until you came.* His head
thrust into her hands. She hugged him savagely.
"Not alone, not ever again. We stay together so long as you want.
We don't tell anyone what you can do. Maybe as you say, we find
someone who'll listen and believe. After that who knows what will
happen. But until then we keep silent." *That is wisdom, and on
keeping silent, my sister, there is no need for you to speak
aloud. One might overhear. Speak with your mind to mine. I shall
listen.* Laris concentrated on
forming words silently. *Like this?* *Exactly like
that.* She muffled giggles in her
hands. *It feels strange.* *You will come to find it
natural and it is safer—for both of us.* With that she
could only agree. *Doesn't it feel odd, one
day you can't understand what I say, the next you don't just
know, you can speak to me?* *I have always understood
much. But now it is as if whatever muffled my mind is gone. Think
of it as if you learned a new language. At first you must think
of every word, understand only a little of what you hear. Then
after a time you begin to think in that tongue. Words flow
freely, understanding comes. It is so with me. I have been able
to do this for many weeks but I wished to wait until I understood
more.* Laris nodded. *I understand.
And since you have learned now, there are things I would discuss
with you.* Purple eyes gleamed at her.
*Cregar and his killing of beasts. Dedran and his links with the
Thieves Guild. I have seen and heard much these past few weeks.
Who hesitates to speak before an animal? More, Dedran hopes to
use us for his own ends at Yohal. He came upon me in the corridor
yesterday and talked to me of his plans.* The cat purred as Laris
grinned. *If he knew what we know he
would not have spoken so freely. But he did. He intends to steal
plans. One on Yohal has discovered a way to secure knowledge more
safely; it is an advance which will bring wealth and
complications for the Thieves Guild. Therefore we are to steal
the plans so the guild may be forewarned and find a means to
break the codes on this new knowledge, so that they can sell or
use it themselves.* Laris considered. If they
failed in the task Dedran would be furious. If he guessed that
the failure was deliberate he'd regard them as tools which had
turned in his hand. Both of them would disappear and no one would
ask questions. Best, then, that they succeeded. But best too,
that they be ready. Once the beast masters on Lereyne and Arzor
had been plundered the hunt would be up behind them. Maybe she could aid that
hunt. It might also be possible to turn Dedran against Cregar. If
they killed each other she could escape in the confusion. After
that who would notice or care that some bond-servant had
vanished? Her bond would not last much longer. By the time they
cleared the sector it would have less than half a year to run.
She shared that thought with Prauo. *Your hoard grows. What if
you bought yourself free? That too is something on which to
think.* Laris blinked. It was
indeed. Dedran would never agree, but if he was no longer alive,
then her bond reverted to the government of whichever planet they
were on when her bond-master died. With only five months to go
few would wish to purchase it. And then too, she had a choice.
Under the law on many worlds she might choose which of a number
of bond-buyers she would accept once the original owner was gone.
If she had the credit to buy herself free there were none who
could prevent it. Prauo's thought held
savagery. *That is very well, sister-without-fur. I would have
taken out the throat of that one before. Save that I would have
been slain and you left little better off.* Laris was practical. *He
doesn't beat me, only hits me now and again. The food is ample
and he obeys the law and clothes me well enough. Many bonded have
far worse conditions. At least he does not use me as a
woman.* The cat snarled softly.
*That is so,* he sent. *But I tasted his mind while I lay
watching you as you talked together. I did not like the taste of
his thoughts. You are valuable as a beast trainer; what if he
persuaded you into an open bond which could be kept or passed to
another?* *I would not
sign.* *There are those who would
happily fake such a bond, and who would listen to
you?* *And then?* *Your bond to the circus is
over in less than one year. An open bond would keep you here
until death claimed you, or if another paid high enough you could
be sold on.* She saw the idea at once.
*There are those who use beasts to fight for amusement.* Her
thoughts darted. Dedran had contacts, friends, power. He could
take her to a place where officials would swear she had signed a
bond herself. The circus boss knew she would never willingly
train beasts for an arena, but once Dedran had an open bond he
could sell her, the arena master would break her to
obedience. Thus far she'd been of more
value as she was. She recalled his words to Cregar. The circus
boss might be getting out, leaving to take up some place of power
in the guild. What matter then if she was of no more use to the
circus? He could sell her as a trainer, or kill her to see her
mouth stayed shut. He'd kill Prauo before that. Dedran was no
fool, he'd know he could never abuse her in any major way while
the big cat lived. Or worse, he could drug
Prauo and sell him to some planetside zoo. Put him in stasis and
take regular samples, try to clone more of him for thief
training. In her mind she felt the cat following her
thoughts. *Best we are gone before he
decides that his time has come,* the cat sent slowly. *Or if he is dead before
that time. Then his plans die with him.* *You think of
Cregar?* *He hates.* *Then let us help that hate.
But for now, best we sleep. Tomorrow there is always work to do.*
Laris smiled. That was all too true. They slept and with morning
both moved toward their new plan. Subtly they strove to widen the
breach between the men. Laris dropped half sentences, apparently
repeating things Dedran had said to her. Prauo allowed Cregar to
follow him twice, each time he warned his sister-without-fur. The
second time it prompted an open quarrel. Cregar was due to leave the
ship when it landed in the morning. The beast master who had
retired on Lereyne had teamed with a pair of wolves. One had
died. Fortunately a genetech had arrived about that time, or so
Dedran's contact reported. The man had successfully cloned a
replacement beast from the body. He had gone on to build other
wolves from tissue samples taken from both. Now Lereyne had a
small pack of the animals in a large preserved wilderness
area. As the only wild Terran
creatures the human-settled planet had, they were much prized.
But there was a catch—the wolves in a beast master team
were genetically augmented to be more intelligent. The
authorities had not wanted a pack of those wolves freed, so the
genetech had reverted his end-products back to ordinary wolves.
Hence Cregar could not simply steal one of the pack, a far easier
task. Instead he must steal away the only wolf left with team
gene-augmentation. Since the beast master lived
on the outskirts of a large city, that meant many watching eyes.
Cregar would have problems. Laris snickered quietly with Prauo
after they overheard a discussion on the difficulties. *I hope he gets caught. He
won't keep silent and take all the punishment. He'd spill on
Dedran.* *And the patrol descends on
the ship, and us as well. Better Cregar returns and we can set
him against Dedran. Now, when they are both about the ship, is a
fine time. Cregar is one who holds a grudge well.* After that the maneuvers
were complicated but ultimately successful. Laris mentioned to
Dedran that she was worried about one of the carra. It had
appeared sluggish when they practiced in the empty training hold.
Perhaps she should ask Cregar to look at it. He trained so well.
For that last comment she adopted a rather dumb and admiring
voice and expression. Dedran, busier than usual with the landing,
and annoyed by the look, snorted and spoke without
thinking. Prauo had trotted past
Cregar, carrying something in his mouth. He was ordered to stop,
to hand over his trophy. He'd given the human a smug defiant look
and ignored the order. Cregar had pursued grimly. He arrived at
the last curve of the corridor in time to hear Laris's suggestion
and Dedran's savage reply. "Cregar! High Command tossed
him out. If he was that good he wouldn't have ended up taking my
orders in a..." Cregar exploded around the
bend. "In a run-down circus in a broken-down ship, bossed by a
man with a fat price on his head," he finished. Dedran's eyes glittered. "I
wouldn't talk about prices if I were you." "Wouldn't you? Then perhaps
I should talk about a man who pretends to be an owner when he's
more of a hired hand." Dedran opened his mouth to
speak as his hand dropped to the stun gun at his belt. Then he
saw Laris listening open-mouthed. Cregar's gaze
followed. "Get the kid out of
here." Dedran waved her to leave
and she obeyed meekly—as far as the bend. Then she
leaned on the bulkhead, sliding the nearest door open about a
foot. But to her exasperation the voices around the bend had
dropped to a vicious muttering. Still, from the tone it was no
friendly conversation. She shut the door again and padded
silently away along the corridor. The low snarl of the sounds
followed her. She busied herself in
cleaning the tigerbat cage and jumped when Cregar spoke
quietly. "You watch yourself, lass. I
may be a lot of what he claims but I'm not a man to work the
arenas." He gave her a half-grin as he walked away, leaving Laris
gaping after him. Perhaps it had been because he'd heard her
admiring him, she thought. Or perhaps he was merely enjoying
spoiling Dedran's plans. For whatever reason he'd said it, he'd
confirmed her own fears and Prauo's belief. She would indeed
watch out. They landed on Yohal and
Cregar slid into the port-side crowd. He gave her a tiny nod as
he went and she nodded back. It wouldn't hurt to keep him sweet.
Prauo wouldn't be working with her in any act. Not when Dedran
planned a theft. He wouldn't want anyone to notice the cat. But
she rode in the opening procession, swung out on the trapeze with
the carra, and acted out the tigerbat play. The audience departed,
leaving Laris to clean the cages and settle the animals in for
the night. After that, in the ship lights she was surprised to
notice men approaching the ramp. One look and Laris recognized
their strut. These men had some sort of authority. They were used
to obedience. She fled for Dedran, dropping into the slurred ship
slang so any stranger who overheard would be less likely to
understand. "There's men coming, look
like law 'a some kind." "Crats, why now?" He moved
quietly to the ramp door and looked around the edge of the
opening. "Authority, maybe." He shrugged and strode down the
ramp. "Can I help you, Honored Sirs?" "Do you have a man named Jas
Cregar aboard?" "No, may I know why you
ask?" "That is not your business.
We will look on your ship." "Now, hold on
there..." His protest was cut short as
one man produced a paper and displayed it. "We have the right.
Step aside." To Laris's bewilderment look
was all they did. They asked no questions even when she made sure
they would see her working. But she did notice something
interesting. One had an earpiece. He glanced at a wrist dial now
and again and she wondered if his asking for Cregar hadn't been a
ruse, if they weren't looking for something else. If so, they
didn't find it. They departed and Dedran stood on the ramp top
wearing a thoughtful expression. She guessed he was wondering
too. And what about tonight? Chapter Three Once the invaders were well
and truly gone Dedran turned to Laris. "What did you see?" She
recounted the earpiece and the impression that one had been
spending too much time looking at a wristwatch. "I thought I heard something
too. So high it was more like an air vibration." She hadn't but
Prauo had. He'd alerted her in the first place. "A watch." Dedran
understood. "I see." His voice came slowly, thoughtfully. "No,
they don't make a sound like that and one doesn't keep looking
over and over to see the time usually. Either they had a
deadline—or that was not a watch." He stood
a moment and spoke to himself, not the listening girl. "And why
Cregar? They knew his name, what did they want with him? Maybe
tonight would be dangerous." He turned briskly. "Laris, wait here, see to
everything. I must make a comcall." She looked after him as he
hurried down the ramp. This was becoming dangerous for her and
Prauo, as well as Dedran. If she jumped ship here the authorities
would probably pick her up at once. Something made her feel that
while the officials might have left, eyes were still on her and
the ship. Dedran didn't return until the setting up was complete.
Then he had only time to fling a hurried word at her as he
passed. "Be ready after
midnight." She nodded
meekly. The performance was well
received, the audience in this backwater enjoyed the novelty and
afterward the crowds on the midway were in a spending mood.
Optional extras or not, the circus would make money here if they
didn't overstay their welcome. To make sure however, the
sideshows had been set up and already the holograms danced and
coaxed passersby to enter the curiosity tents. In the game tents
barkers called the wandering crowds to roll up and try their
luck. It was a charming scene—if one didn't know, as Laris did,
that all the games were carefully rigged, and most of the
curiosity tent attractions were cunningly faked. Prauo's mind voice came to
her as she moved in the shadows. *You were right. Others watch.
There is a ring about us.* *Where is the
nearest?* *Walk toward the tigerbat
cages slowly. Be casual. I will direct you. I cannot probe their
minds but I can feel their attention like a light directed upon
us.* She obeyed, wandering as if
checking on the circus animals. Yes, a watcher there, and another
further along. A third near the ramp noting all who came and went
from the ship. She stretched, allowed her shoulders to slump
wearily. Then she plodded up the ramp. Once out of sight she
trotted in search of Dedran. "There're spies outside.
They're watching everyone." His face twisted in fear and
fury as she spoke. Then he fought for calm. "Well done. But I
must get out of here again for an hour or so. Let no one
know I've left." He considered. "Go to the tent of Good Fortunes.
Set it up so that it blocks the alley between beast cages. The
carra have the end cage, do they not?" "Yes." She saw his plan and
grinned, a quick flicker of amusement. "Well? Hurry, girl.
Hurry!" Laris did so, appearing back
down the ramp minutes later with two of the men carrying a light
tent and a large case. She'd done this before, usually to take
messages for Dedran—the sort of message he didn't
want others to know he was sending or receiving. Not that she was
able to read them, of course. Dedran wasn't that silly. He
trusted her more than most, which was to say, only a
little. She oversaw the setting up
of the tent and dismissed the men. Then she vanished inside.
Moving swiftly she unfolded the table, placed the crystal ball on
the tabletop and laid out the cards. From a pocket in the case
she retrieved a long brilliant robe, wig, face veil, and several
other items. She donned the wig and clothing then moved to the
door to place a sign at the entrance. It took little time before
seekers after knowledge began to drift her way. For several hours she told
fortunes, amused the customers with her wit and insight. Three
years back a real teller of fortunes had traveled with the
circus. Shiira had an empathy rating and had been very good. In
Laris she'd detected another who could read the emotions and
hopes flung at a teller of fortunes. She'd liked the child and
quietly, patiently, she'd taught Laris all the girl could learn.
Shiira had left after a few months. Her abilities had warned her
it was best to be gone, and she had listened. Fortunately she had
said nothing of Laris's small talent to Dedran. Almost a year later when
Dedran had needed a back door Laris had suggested she become a
fortune-teller. It had worked that time, and other times
subsequently. Moreover it was a useful supplement to the circus
income at leaner times. After all, Laris was a bond-servant and
the money she made went into circus coffers. However, to Dedran
she was merely a good talker giving the fools what they wished to
hear. She talked on until midnight had come and gone. Then a man
paced into the tent. She knew the feeling of
Dedran but he would not be pleased to know it. He'd donned the
mask and the light, toe-to-throat coverall worn by members of the
Casran sect, an offshoot of the main religion on Yohal. The
watchers would still suspect. The disguise was too basic. Too
obvious. She went into her routine and was hushed. "Enough. It's Dedran. Now,
do you have the things?" She produced the items she'd
laid aside ready. He stripped coverall and mask then settled the
wig and overcoat into place. Quick strokes with plastiflesh
stick, a lightening of his eyebrows, contacts slipped in, and he
was a different man. It had taken only minutes and thus far she'd
taken care to give each fortune seeker a good long fortune. The
watchers, if any had concentrated on her, were already used to
seeing those who entered stay for a length of time. Dedran raised the rear of
the tent, moved out unobtrusively, and hurried down the narrow
alley between cages. Laris watched. He slipped through a panel at
the back of the carra cage and would emerge unobtrusively on the
other side. The watchers would start to wonder when he did not
reappear but she'd dealt with that too. A short time later one of
the women scratched at the tent back. Laris lifted the material.
The woman walked in, donned mask and coverall, and left openly
through the front of the tent. Let the watchers see that,
and not know the person they had seen enter Laris's tent was not
the same person as had just departed. The sect's costume had been
of use to Dedran before now—and had likely been useful as a
disguise to many involved in both intrigues and other acts, Laris
thought. The Casrans were an equal opportunity sect. To that end,
while light, the coveralls were designed to hide any gender
differences. One never knew if one spoke to male or female until
the one addressed replied. Even then, most who'd belonged for any
length of time had been trained to speak in a flat neutral voice
which made it hard to tell male from female. Laris shared her
thoughts with Prauo. *A11 that is true,
furless-sister. But what interests me more is Dedran's errand.
And why those men sought Cregar.* Laris told another fortune
while mulling over those questions. She was interrupted by
giggles outside. Someone speaking in accented one-speech was
insisting that she be taken inside to learn her fate. The hair on
the back of Laris's neck rose. She could feel danger here. The
voice sounded like that of a young flighty girl, indulged,
spoiled, and from some rich planetside family. But there were
undertones only Laris, and through her, Prauo, could
detect. *Leave, sister, quickly. Go
openly before they enter.* Laris leapt for the tent
entrance. All her instincts were shouting that she should not
allow herself to be trapped inside where none could see. She was
barely in time. Her slender body brushed past the girl who would
have entered and the girl staggered sideways with a gasp. Laris
caught only an impression of her. Apparently young, richly
dressed—and with the most coldly vicious,
experienced eyes Laris had ever seen. The man with her matched
well. If he wasn't heavily armed, then Laris was a carra. He
appeared young and from some wealthy provincial family but his
eyes too did not match the outward picture. *Strip your veil,* Prauo
sent. *Make them believe they are dealing with a
child.* Laris paused to wipe her
forehead as she stood outside the tent. She removed the veil,
lightened her voice, and shifted her stance to the slightly
angular hip-shot way of standing of a younger girl. "I apologize, Gracious Lady,
Honored Sir. But I am weary, the tent grows stuffy, and I feel
unwell." The girl surveyed her. The
air was one of spoiled irritation but the eyes showed only
calculation. "I wanted my fortune told. I demand it. That's why
you're there, isn't it? Tell her, Baris. I'm the Lady Ideena, and
it'll pay for her to do what I want." Laris concentrated, letting
her body sag a little, her voice waver. "I'm sorry, Lady. But I
really do feel unwell." From the corner of one eye she could see
Dedran approaching, or at least someone who looked the way he had
when he had departed her tent. She raised her voice, thinning it
to a more childish note. "I feel siiick. Oooo!" She
retched realistically. Dedran had slipped behind a
cage. He wouldn't want this pair—whoever they were—to get their hands on her too
long in case she talked. His current disguise would take only
minutes to remove. She must play for time. The man took hold of
her shoulder. "If you feel sick then you
should go back inside your tent, my dear. You can lie down in
there. We'll stay with you. Maybe you'll feel better after a
while." Somehow Laris doubted that. She doubled over, holding the
tent rope in a ferocious grip against his urging hands. Her voice
came out in a piercing wail. "I feel so sick." She
swallowed again and again, forcing her stomach to react. She'd
eaten only a couple of hours earlier. One of the circus women had
brought her the food and the portion had been generous. It was
always easier to be sick on a full stomach. She swallowed again.
Where was Dedran? They were beginning to attract attention but
the grip on her shoulder hurt. The girl, hands screened by their
bodies, was trying to make her let go of the tent
rope. Laris felt her fingers pried
loose one by one. They'd have her in a minute. She wailed again.
Her stomach finally cooperated and she was lavishly sick over the
girl's expensive cloak. The girl snarled. "Get her into the tent,
Baris. There's gossip about this outfit and I want to find out
all I can. There could be credits in it for us." A voice came just as Laris
was running out of strength. "Gracious Lady, Honored Sir. May I
aid?" Dedran moved to block the tent entrance. Laris took her cue. "Oh,
Master. I'm so sorry. Maybe it was something I ate, an' the tent
being so hot. I came out to get air an' these gentlefolk wanted
their fortunes told. I was afraid if I went back inside I'd be
sick but they kept pulling at me, an' then I really was sick and
now they're mad at me..." She let her voice—which had gradually become
louder, attracting the attention of many close by—trail off into childish
sobs. Dedran drew himself up. "I
apologize for my bond-servant. But she is very young." "Too young to be in bond,
surely?" The man's tone was acid. Dedran raised his eyebrows,
lying smoothly. "On Meril one may set a bond providing the
servant is ten. And the girl has only been with me two years."
His voice became silky. "If it is any of your business. It is not
I who has been frightening the child." Laris swallowed a grin.
She'd been bound on Kowar where the bond age was sixteen.
Although it was true Meril permitted a far lower age. And she'd
been with the circus more than two years. But then she'd also
been bound earlier than the law allowed. Oh, what a tangled web
was being woven. But that precious pair had just noticed that
people were gathering, drawn by the commotion and raised voices.
They wouldn't like that much public attention, she was sure. They
didn't. Her would-be abductors were muttering explanations and
allowing the crowd to close about them until they were
gone. "Who were they?" Dedran
hissed. "They called themselves
Baris and Lady Ideena," Laris hissed back. He nodded, apparently
recognizing the names. "Scavengers seeking pickings and
information. Scavengers—with a touch of the tigerbat," he
added as he helped her with mock solicitous-ness to walk toward
the ship. "What did they ask you?" "Nothing. They just tried to
get me back into the tent. She said there was gossip and where
there was talk there were credits." Dedran grunted. "She'd be
the one to hear any talk too. Crats! Have we drawn the attention
of every nose on a dozen planets?" He focused on Laris. "You'd
better not be really ill. We've a job to do tonight still." She
gasped. That was madness with so many watchers. He
shrugged. "I know. But there's no
choice. We do it tonight. I've been given a security-breaker and
copier. It will take time but should break the security coding
and copy the information. Then you can put the target back in
place and no one will know. We leave in a couple more days and
they won't know what happened." He snickered. "Not until they
find copies of their fancy protections being sold all
over." Laris hesitated to argue but
she had to say something. It would be Laris he turned on and her
at risk. "Surely they'd have the information protected by their
own new codes." He chuckled harshly. "It
should be. But money buys favors. It bought that one. There's an
assistant who thinks he should be more." "Then why doesn't he just
sell the information?" She'd noticed that he seemed to be talking
freely and she chilled. That wasn't a good sign. "None of your business, my
dear. You and your clever cat just get the thing to me outside. I
copy it, and you return it." His fingers dug into her arm as he
shook her slightly. "Understand?" "Yes," Laris
muttered. "Good. I'll have the tent
packed up. You go and sleep, eat something but not too much. We
don't want you being sick in the wrong place." He laughed and
pushed her toward her cabin. "Go on. And be ready in a couple of
hours. I won't want to waste time." She nodded, trudging for her
cabin. She liked none of this and danger signals were nudging her
harder and harder. She slid her door aside and joined the big cat
where he sprawled comfortably on the bunk. No one could hear
anything but within the cabin the two were at once engaged in
intense discussion. They came to no conclusions,
only questions. Who were the searching men, why did they ask for
Cregar, and for what were they searching? Then there were Baris
and the Lady Ideena. Dedran said they were scavengers. Presumably
they'd have asked questions of Laris. But what would they have
wanted to know? Were they members of the Thieves Guild and if so,
did they have any standing? If they did, how high was it in
comparison to Dedran's status? They considered that for
some time. There'd always been thieves, even on Terra. When
Terrans broke into space, thieves had gone with them. Gradually
they'd organized into a guild which now stretched across the
settled planets. They had their own organizational
structure—that much was known by ordinary
people who kept their ears open for the gossip, although little
else about the shadowy group was public knowledge. It was known
that the guild had a system which allowed the more important
members to be recognized by their own people on any human-settled
planet. That, Laris believed, applied to Dedran, which suggested
in turn that either he himself was important, or that he was
commanded by one who was of power in the guild. Finally, tired out, girl and
cat slept. The alarm woke both at three A.M. planet time. Yohal's
rotation being slower, there were still some six hours until
daylight. Laris yawned, stretched, and sullenly climbed into a
dark blue jumpsuit. Prauo trotted silently beside her as she left
her cabin. Dedran was waiting, dressed in a dull dark-green
coverall. One side of it bulged slightly and from the way one
hand shifted Laris was sure he was carrying a stunner as
well. He made for his cabin again,
locked the door, switched on a light, and dropped down a desktop.
On that he laid out plans and several gadgets. Laris had grown
used to using the items and to learning plans within minutes.
Once he'd finished the explanation she asked only one
question. "Security in the
area?" "All taken care of. Now,
come with me and don't speak again until I say you can. No matter
how long that may be." He beckoned and set off toward the
ramp. She and the cat fell in
behind obediently. They traveled in silence until they reached a
hovercab stand. The cabs were robotic and accepted tokens. Dedran
signaled her to remain silent as he fed tokens into the fare
slot. The cab lifted, and they were on their way. Some twenty
minutes later they arrived, exited, walked around a corner,
climbed into a second cab, and rode again before finding another.
They left the third cab and went on foot a while before Dedran
halted at a corner. From one pocket he took a
small rod and extended it to a right angle. Placing his eye
against one end he peered in. "Right, be ready." He waited,
"Wait... wait ... now, around the corner." Laris obeyed. He
pointed to a wall cloaked in heavy shrubbery around the base.
"Into there, now." She scurried into hiding, Prauo close on her
heels. Dedran paused, looking out over the street. All was quiet
and empty. On a post above them a scanner revolved
slowly. Laris had noted that in one
swift glance as she dived for cover. It was slower than those
normally used to cover the wealthier residential streets. It also
seemed to halt in its circuit earlier and return. It looked as if
the last part of the missing arc would have covered the house
wall. Now it didn't. She guessed someone had been here before
them. Some kid working his passage for the guild by slowing and
aborting a portion of the scanner's movement. But there was no time to
think about that. She had to keep her mind on the job. Prauo was
scaling the wall, a fine rope trailing behind him. He reached the
top, folded his shoulders together, slid between bars barely a
hand's length apart, then walked briskly around one to anchor the
rope. His mind voice reached her. *Climb, sister-one. None
stir here.* She climbed, leaving Dedran
below. Once balanced on the window ledge she was able to cut the
center bar and bend it outward. She slid adroitly through the
narrow gap and joined the waiting cat. Her hand smoothed the
ruffled fur over his shoulders. *Just as well for us that
Yohal has little of the inner world's technology. Their security
is laughable.* *Not so laughable that they
cannot invent the thing we seek.* *Having technology and
having brains are different things.* She felt his amused
agreement as they moved silently through the building. Dedran had
shown her a plan of the place. It was simplified but it had all
she needed to find the safe. A small instrument given to her
before she climbed would deactivate the alarm. She had the
security codes after that. The guild would hold their stolen
knowledge until the new invention was in widespread use. Then,
little by little they would sell the code-breaker. They would make millions of
credits from the sale, garner a hundred favors owed. This theft
of the breaker's plans and technology, if successful, would
probably gain Dedran more guild status. If he failed it might
gain all three of them an early, unlabeled, and unlamented grave.
Laris moved more carefully. She'd gain nothing from a successful
theft but she had no desire for the possible results of a theft
foiled by discovery. Ahead the big cat moved on
silken silent paws. They accessed the safe without difficulty
once it was found. Laris shivered with nerves the almost sixty
minutes it took to crack the technology and make the copy. With
all the information safely in her hands she returned it, closed
and re-coded the safe. Then, she carefully reset the
alarm. Half done. She moved quickly
back through the building. Hissed the all-clear to Dedran and
climbed through the window bars. With the miniature heat device
she re-welded the bar shut; below, Dedran was waiting when she
descended the rope. Together they watched as the scanner circled
slowly, halted, returned, and set off again. "Now." They trotted quickly
around the corner into the darker alley. Laris heaved a sigh as
they reached it in safety. No alarm. With luck they'd be home
free. It seemed they were, since in another hour they were
drifting, darker shadows among shadows in a deserted circus
ground, up the ramp to their respective cabins, and still in
silence. After that Laris waited. The
performances went by, there was no sign of Baris and Ideena and
after another week of ordinary events the circus's ship requested
takeoff clearance. It was granted casually. They lifted from
Yohal and no one below was the wiser that the departing ship was
now worth a million times its previous value. Chapter Four The circus landed on Arzor
with the minimum of official fuss and the maximum glare of
publicity. Not since the half-forgotten days before the war had
there been such an event. Some of the oldest families at Arzor
Port liked to consider themselves sophisticated. But
sophistication is in the eye of the beholder. It pleased the
first-ship families to decide that a traveling circus was
sophisticated and to have their entire families attend in their
best clothing. With them, as Dedran had
expected, came the beast master here. Laris was watching when
they arrived. "Is that them?" Occasionally Dedran enjoyed
showing off what he knew. "Yes, see. The man at the end with the
woman. That's the beast master and his wife. His name is Hosteen
Storm and she is Tani." "Who're the others with
them?" Laris was peering at the distant figures with
fascination. "His stepfather and younger
half-brother. Storm only joined the family after the war. He was
raised apart. But the stepfather is from a first-ship family. He
doesn't make a parade of it but there's some wealth and a lot of
influence there." He studied her briefly. "I'd have no objections
if you spoke to them. With you handling the animals here they may
well wish to talk with you." His fingers bit into her arm. "Just
be very careful what you say, my dear. We wouldn't want them to
be warned in any way, would we?" "No, of course not. I'll be
careful." But he'd put the idea into
her mind and she thought about it all through the performance.
She gave it up reluctantly. If Dedran thought she'd let anything
slip it would be her body on the turntable; what would Prauo do
then? Even as her mind flew in search of ideas she soared on her
trapeze. The carras soared with her, tumbling like the happy
beasts they were, whirling about her, clowning to her serious act
so that Arzor Port alternately gasped at her skill and laughed as
the carras foiled her attempts to be a serious artist time and
time again. She caught glimpses of the
family as she swung. They were laughing as hard as anyone, all
but the beast master and even he wore a half-smile. Somehow it
pleased her, that they should admire her. She pushed her act to
the edge and brought gasps from below. She ended the performance
by dropping lightly from the trapeze to land bouncing in the
safety net, the carras dropping with her, chittering
merrily. The family was clapping for
her as she swung down, to turn, bowing to the audience. She
scampered with the beasts from the ring and Dedran watched her
take up the carras. That had been an interesting display. The
girl had pushed safety to the limits and given an act that had
brought the audience halfway to its feet in horror and then
applause. But how much of her daring had been a determination to
show her skill before a beast master, Dedran wondered. His mind paused at that
thought before following the path. How much had been admiration
for beast master skills? Maybe a desire to see the man's animals
remain where they were? Dedran was not a fool. He knew the girl
was more and more unhappy over the stolen animals that died. So
was Cregar. Could it have been one of them who had brought down
those spies from the authority, and later, Baris and Ideena, upon
the show? He'd have to think about that. Cregar and Laris could
be replaced. Not easily on the part of the man but for the girl,
there was the De Pyall camp where he'd first found
her. His lips twisted into a
sneer. In a refugee camp there were always those who'd take any
job, accept any condition to be free of the place. He'd known the
girl's fears. But she'd still followed him. Signed a false closed
bond and held to it. His glare became a scowl. He hoped to leave
the circus behind if his patron's plans worked out well. He would
take the girl—someone with her skills was worth
real credits to arena buyers if he faked her signature on an open
bond. He had to be careful there. Between officials, the patrol,
and do-gooders who checked on bondservants, he dare not make the
wrong move. Not yet. But the closed bond under which he held her
did not allow the bond's sale to someone else. An open bond would
permit that. He wanted the money he could
get for her. But the guild had no time for what its members
wanted. He had a job to do and until it was completed he dare not
take time for his own wishes. Not that it mattered anyway. There
were months yet before her bond was completed and where would she
go then? No, she'd sign for another year. Surely by that time
he'd have taken a few live beasts. He must. A small shiver ran down his
spine. The guild was becoming impatient. The latest message from
his patron had indicated that Dedran's position could be in
danger if he didn't produce something soon. And the guild had a
simple way of seeing that an out-of-favor member told no tales.
The lean man shivered again as he ran into the ring, spinning to
bow and garner the audience's attention in his upraised hands.
Cregar had better not fail or it could be the death of all of
them. He switched off his
thoughts, concentrated on the clapping fools around him, and
signaled the next act. He had a show to give and that too was
part of it. Lull the idiots, then strike. He'd use the girl to
open a gap in beast master armor. She was quick. She'd make
friends. Then return to give him what Cregar needed to take the
animals once the circus was safely away. He settled to the whirl
of acts about him. Laris came on again in her
boyish guise as the tigerbat cage was pushed in and connected to
the larger cage where she'd display their play. Her old friend
was first out and she saw the crowd stiffen. She faced it, then
turned her back as it ran on its wing-knuckles to lie on the
ground, pulling the light branch across its lower
body. She turned back, miming her
shock, her fear at the sight of the deadly beast—and tigerbats were deadly, in that
there was no fakery. To the Terran eye they looked like an
amalgam of tiger and large bat, hence the name. They stood some
five feet tall, and one on the attack appeared to be all reaching
teeth and long sickle-like claws. They'd been a horror to the
settlers on their original world, although by now they had been
almost wiped out there. Still, enough people on other worlds had
seen depictions of them and their depredations to know how truly
dangerous they were. Laris mimed her fear,
showing to the crowd then her growing realization that the savage
beast was trapped and no threat to her. She was triumphant,
raising her weapon to kill, then slowly finding sympathy for the
injured beast, freeing it, and standing to watch it dart
away. In the front ringside seats,
a ranger leaned over to speak to Storm. "He's clever, but aren't
those things dangerous?" "Dangerous enough alone and
lethal in a major swarm. I doubt they'd have that here. A real
swarm has a hundred members or more." The man returned to his seat
and Storm concentrated. Beside him he could feel Tani doing the
same as her hand slid into his. Her whisper came to his ears
alone. "That's the girl from the
trapeze act, isn't it?" She caught his nod. Her senses extended
to touch the animal in the cage. "Friendship. It trusts her. She
is kind." "How many of
them?" "I feel five, no
more." Storm nodded slightly. That
was the number he could feel as well. Enough to tear the girl to
pieces in seconds if they attacked in swarm-rage. But he sensed
no anger. Only anticipation, enjoyment. They liked what they
would do. He watched the act. It was clever. The whole tiny play
was a timeworn idea, the person who saves an animal only to have
the beast save them in turn. But it was well done and tigerbats
could be genuinely lethal to the person who acted with them. She
was skillful. From his ringside position he could sense that she
was in no danger from these. She took her bow and the
tigerbats ran down the tunnel to the smaller cage. It was rolled
out and the carras returned with two Terran dogs to put on a
clown show which had everyone laughing as the main cage was
swiftly dismantled and removed. Storm and Tani came out
after the performance still smiling. His father looked at him in
resignation. "I suppose you want to see
the girl and her animals. Go on then. I'll get a ride with Put
Larkin. He'll drop me off. It's a fine night. I can walk down our
road." Tani fidgeted and Storm gave
one of his rare smiles. "It looks as if I should. Tani wants to
see the animals." He glanced at Logan, his younger half-brother.
"And I suppose you do too?" "Darn right." He showed off
a little. Storm and Tani weren't the only ones who could see
through a disguise. "Except that it's the girl I'd like to see.
Anyone who can sit around in a cage full of tigerbats and look
casual is someone worth meeting." Tani giggled. "She isn't bad
looking but don't you think she's too young for you?" Logan flushed. "I think she
may be older than she looks, and anyhow, I'd just like to see her
act again. She's good." His voice went up enthusiastically. "Did
you see her on that trapeze?" Tani nodded. "She was good.
You're right. And I loved those little animals with her in that
act. Storm?" She turned to her husband. "What were
they?" "Carras. They're a bit like
Terran monkeys, aren't they? They have similar habits too, but
nicer natures." His voice lowered. "What did you sense from
them?" "Pleasure," Tani said
softly. "They like the girl and they enjoy their act with her.
They were having fun in that clown act too. They aren't abused,
Storm. They're working for the fun of it and the food
treats." Her husband nodded. It was
something Kelson, head of the ranger group, had asked them to
find out. He looked down at Tani. They'd been married only a few
months and he was still a little incredulous at his good fortune.
After so long walking alone save for his beast master team he'd
never thought he'd find someone who would slip into place with
them all. But Tani had. She was not officially trained but her
gifts were, if anything, a little stronger than his
own. Her team, together with his
group, had been left at the main Quade ranch. Tani wanted to walk
the animal cages, study their inhabitants, and maybe arrange to
take samples from some of them to send on to the interstellar ark
her aunt and uncle ran. It preserved species against permanent
destruction and the Terran dogs should be immortalized in its
tissue-sample banks. They made their way slowly
through the crowd. It was a good-natured bunch here this evening,
Storm thought. But then with some of the port VIPs present, the
rangers and security were also out. Few of even the most
enthusiastic brawlers would be silly enough to start trouble
here. Tani danced ahead and his face softened again as he watched
her. It had been barely six months since the end of Arzor's
problem after Xiks had seeded the deadly flesh-eating swarms of
clickers in Arzor's lands of the Big Blue. He knew she still had
nightmares sometimes about the clickers and no wonder. He had a
few himself. But Tani had almost recovered from the trauma the
clickers had caused her. Last week she and Storm had been off
hunting with the Djimbut tribe of the Nitra, the Arzoran natives
with whom Tani had made such firm friends while she and Storm
sought out the origin of the clickers. The swarms had slain
natives and settlers alike and in the end, both peoples had
combined to destroy them. Tani and her beast team of coyotes and
Mandy the Ishan paraowl had accounted for a full bag of grass
hens on the hunt last week. Storm's team had remained at
home. Surra, his dune-cat, was in heat. She had not become
pregnant last time. But this time he was sure she would. After
that she'd bear the first dune-cat cubs to appear in the three
and a half years since Terra's destruction. Baku the African
eagle might take longer to produce her eggs. But she'd accepted
the mate Tani had given her from the ark's tissue samples. Hing,
the meercat, had had no scruples about a mate. She'd taken one
look at the male offered and accepted him with churring
approval. The meercat group of Hing,
her new mate, her four adult offspring, and their mates, were
producing a meercat population explosion just at present. Not
that this was a problem. The all but extinct Arzoran rinces had
occupied an important ecological niche on the planet, since it
was they who helped keep several desert species of large insect
and small lizard under population control. They also ate the eggs
of the big solitary venomous yoris lizard, when they could tease
a female from her nest in safety. The rinces had almost died
out after human settlement and a rince plague which followed two
generations later. Even scientific intervention had failed to
improve their survival rate. The meercats were moving into the
rince niche and doing it in style. Hosteen loved to see them.
After so long without a mate Hing was making up for lost time.
The original group with added mates had been ten. All had mated
and produced so that now the group numbered almost thirty.
Normally only the dominant female would have bred, but this time
at least, they had been encouraged to ignore custom. Hosteen and Tani had chosen
a second site for a meercat home. Once the babies were adult
they'd move half of the group there. Later the meercats would
move on to form their own new groups. In time they'd spread
across Arzor's desert lands. Both settlers and natives would
approve of that; the yoris were having a population explosion of
their own and needed the meercats to cut back on the big lizard's
numbers. Up ahead of him he felt a
surge of excitement from Tani. She turned to beckon him. He
reached her and looked in the cage. He blinked as he studied
Prauo. "What on Arzor is
that?" "I thought you'd
know." Logan joined them. "What's
that?" Hosteen snorted. "I've seen
many animals but not that one." He studied the longer gold fur,
the gleaming black of the shorter, plusher fur that clad the
creature's legs, face, and tail. "I really don't know. It's
beautiful but I'm certain I've never seen one like it before. I
wonder where it came from." Laris had been listening
quietly, unobtrusive around the cage corner. She allowed herself
to be seen as the question was asked. The younger man saw her and
nudged his brother. The three of them turned to look at her.
Prauo was in her mind. *Good scent,* he said
sleepily. *Don't distract me. They're
the kind who'd notice.* Aloud she spoke politely. "You like my
cat, noble visitors?" Logan spoke first. "He's
beautiful. None of us have ever seen one like him before. Were
did he come from?" "Fremlyn," Laris
began. The other man cut in. "I've
been to Fremlyn. They don't have an animal like this." Laris eyed him coolly. "I
never said they did. I said he came from Fremlyn. Where his home
world is, none of us know. I found him as a tiny starving cub
when the circus was there. He was on waste ground at the edge of
the port. He's been with me now for a long time. For all I know
he was some experimental beast and has no breed." The girl grinned. "My name's
Tani, this is Storm, my husband, and Logan, his brother. I'm
pleased to greet you." Laris nodded. "I'm Laris.
You seem to know animals?" Her tone was a question. Tani laughed softly. "Storm
is a beast master, if you've ever heard of them." "I've heard." Laris closed
her mind tight. Logan smiled. "You should
have been one as well," he said cheerfully. "That act with the
tigerbats was wonderful. But the stuff on the trapeze had my
heart in my mouth." He laughed suddenly. "When that carra caught
onto your foot just as you swung, I've never seen anything so
funny." Laris found she was smiling
too, seduced into verbal carelessness by the honest praise. "It's
part of the act but they enjoy it so much. Sometimes we just add
in bits. Everyone does. Particularly if we need to stretch the
acts because one's missing." Tani looked interested.
"What act was missing, what happened to it?" "Nothing much." Darn, it was
Cregar who was absent and she shouldn't have mentioned it. She
covered quickly. "The trainer has a bad cold. He's resting until
he gets over it. He doesn't want to give it to anyone
else." Storm said nothing but he'd
heard enough lies in his time to know one when it was thrust at
him. So did Tani. She changed the subject with more admiration
and speculation as to Prauo's origins. Laris could lose herself
in that very happily. But she was careful to suggest nothing of
the big cat's other talents. These people weren't fools. She
thought that Storm had guessed her to have been less than
truthful over the missing act she'd carelessly
mentioned. She showed them around the
other beasts, accepted an invitation to eat with them, and found
she was enjoying herself. It had been so long since she'd had
free time. Afterward she returned alone and walked toward her
cabin. Prauo's mind voice broke into her thoughts. *Dedran waits for you. His
mind churns.* With that warning she did not jump as she rounded
the corridor bend to find the man waiting. She took the
initiative swiftly. "I've made friends with them
as you asked. I think I can get them to invite me to their ranch
in a day or two. How hard do you want me to push
this?" His posture relaxed a
little. "Don't be obvious. But as quickly as you can apart from
that." Laris wanted to keep him
pleased with her. Perhaps the possibility of more information
would do that. Technology had advanced in the ten generations
since Terrans had first settled another planet. She remembered
where she had seen one of the tiny card-sized voice and picture
recorders. One of those could tape some five hundred hours of
recording, for replay on a larger machine. "What about taking one of
the mini recorders? Cregar had one I could use if he's left it
behind." She saw the last tensions
leave his body. "Too dangerous. If they spotted it they'd ask
questions. Do nothing to alert them. If they ask you to stay a
few days, you may. Don't tell them you're a bond-servant either.
I want you to get a look at their security precautions if they
have any. See as much of their land as you can." "I want to take
Prauo." His body tensed again.
"Why?" "Because they're interested
in him. The girl wants tissue samples." Dedran snickered at that
but said nothing. "And I can use him to check out security more
thoroughly. They'll think it natural I have him. The man's a
beast master, remember. He's inclined to believe that someone
with an animal is more trustworthy." She wasn't at all sure that
was true but Dedran would believe it. He did. "Very well. Prauo can go
with you if they ask you to visit and if they're happy with that.
In the morning you can drop the news that I've decided to stay a
while longer. We'll be performing here for a couple of weeks.
After that I plan to rest the animals and performers several more
weeks before we leave. See those people as often as possible
until the season is finished. After that, hint that you'd like to
see their ranches." "Ranches?" Dedran grinned nastily. "I
said your friends have money. There's the main Quade ranch in the
basin. But the old man has land in the Peaks country about five
hundred miles away, and Storm and his wife have more land running
alongside it up there. Quade mostly lives in the basin, but the
other three all spend time at the second place. There's some
strange tales about that family." Laris flicked a look at him. He
was standing there and she could tell that he'd stopped being
suspicious of her and was wondering about Storm, Logan, and Tani.
She prompted him. "Strange tales?" "Some gossip about Xik
holdout groups. Apparently Storm found one and brought in friends
to destroy it. The rumor was that he had native help. After that
there was a hush-hush deal in the desert. Some high muckymuck got
lost there and Storm went in to find him at a time the tribes
were up in arms. All of that story was hushed up by the patrol,
or so talk has it." Laris shivered. "Yeah. I don't want them
around, myself. After that there's a tale about some kind of
plague that killed natives and started in on humans. I heard that
Storm and the girl stopped it cold somehow." Laris stared, stating a
common belief in all Terran space. "Diseases don't cross species.
If it killed natives surely it wouldn't harm us?" "I know, I know. But that's
the rumor." He pushed off from where he leaned against the wall.
"You get to bed. Just remember: Tread carefully with that lot. I
want you in there with them thinking of you as a nice little girl
with a cute pussycat." He turned away abruptly and
walked off, leaving Laris looking after him. She knew the way he
thought. He was wondering if she'd find the Quade family so much
to her liking that she'd be too talkative. She'd reassured him
for the moment. But she'd have to be wary. The problem was that
she did like what she'd seen of them. But if Dedran decided to be
rid of her they'd be of no use to her and in danger themselves.
Better she should stick to what he wanted. She plodded wearily to
her cabin, moved Prauo over, and slumped down. She was asleep
almost before she pulled the hotcover over herself. For the next twelve days she
obeyed Dedran's instructions. She was openly delighted to see any
of the family whenever they appeared. She arranged for Tani to
have tissue samples from the dogs. She talked by the hour about
the circus, Prauo, and the other beasts and acts. All without
saying anything which would anger Dedran. She listened in turn to
Logan's tales of the natives, and Arzor. She noticed that despite
his apparent openness as well, he said nothing of the rumors
Dedran had heard. At first she had seen all three of the younger
family. But by the time the circus was due to close it was Logan
she saw most often. He found her by the carra
cage. "Laris, I see the show's shutting down. When do you
leave?" She smiled at him. "Not for
weeks yet. Dedran says we're all tired. We're to take a break.
We'll stay here for a few weeks and rest up before we go on to
Trastor. We have quite a long season there." Logan studied the ground.
"Do you ever get any real time off? I mean, can you leave the
circus?" "Not for good." Her reply
was quick. He looked up. "No, I mean,
could you spend time on our ranch? I could teach you to ride.
Would Dedran agree to let you come and stay with us for a few
days?" "We could ask him." She
wasn't sure how to play this. Let Dedran give her the cues. Logan
led her in search of the circus boss and once they found Dedran,
asked straightforwardly. "My father would be pleased
if Laris could stay a while with us. We'd show her Arzor. She'd
be quite safe." Yes, but would the family be safe from her, Laris
thought sadly. Dedran was considering. "I have no objection. My
ward is a sensible girl and I'm sure you would see she came to no
harm." He watched Logan react to the words. The boy was becoming
attracted. All to the good. He'd be less on his guard, and the
others, seeing him so, would accept the girl more swiftly. He
glanced kindly at his little piece of bait. "When would you like
to leave, my dear? I can have Girran take your orders. Tell him
anything he must do to care for the beasts." "Is it all right if I take
Prauo?" He nodded and she turned to Logan. "Will anyone mind if I
bring him?" Logan grinned. "Storm said
you'd probably want to. He won't try killing anything without
your say-so, will he?" She shook her head firmly. "Then it should
be fine. Be ready the day after tomorrow. I'll come with the
crawler to collect you about midmorning." His smile widened.
"It'll be great to have you at the ranch, and don't worry. You'll
have a wonderful time with us." He left Laris with Dedran
and hurried away. The girl kept her face blank knowing Dedran was
looking at her. "You know what to do?" Laris nodded. "Check out all
the security systems," she recited for him. "Map the layout of
both places. Learn the routine and who's where and when. What if
they have a safe or something? Should I try for the code? It
might help if Cregar can confuse their local patrol about the
real target." Dedran looked approvingly.
"Well thought. Yes, if you can get the safe code do so. But take
no chances. Besides, even on these rural planets, many these days
have security systems that are quite sophisticated. Not around
their property but certainly protecting a safe. If it's that
secure, then Cregar will have no time to play about." His last words were
emphasized and Laris hid another shiver. She knew the guild
methods of opening such security. It often required only the hand
which would make a print. More technical systems required a live
hand. That too could be arranged, as could the owner's voice. Few
refused to cooperate when shown a family member and told the
alternative. The guild was known for its ruthlessness. But she would enjoy this
brief time away. She could pretend that she was an ordinary girl
visiting friends. Prauo could run free, be happy, and hunt where
permitted. He'd never had the chance to do that before. Logan was
on time and she seated herself with him while Prauo jumped easily
onto the back of the crawler. "Do you have many of
these?" Logan shook his head. "Nope.
Just this one for hauling loads. Arzor uses a minimum of
technology. It breaks down, has to be fixed, and it's very
expensive to import. On the ranches we get around on horseback.
The rangers and security have copters. But only a
few." "Security, that's what you
call your local patrolmen?" Logan looked a little
surprised. "Men. What about women?" "Oh, on Kowar they'd never
have let a woman join. They only have patrolmen." "Kowar? Is that where you
come from?" "Sort of." She changed the
subject. "What's that bush? It's so pretty." He started to tell her about
the plants they passed. Then the land. By the time they were
almost at the ranch he'd forgotten the question she'd never
answered. But Laris felt she must decide. Should she tell them
the truth if they asked again? She could do so safely. The only
thing she had to hide was her exact status with Dedran. He'd
claimed her as his ward with the Quades. That was respectable.
Some planets didn't hold with the bond-system. She thought Arzor might be
one of them. And still more worlds did not approve of bonding
underage children. She'd keep silent on all that but if they
asked again she would tell the truth about the little she
remembered of the times before Meril then Kowar's De Pyall
refugee camps. She had just made the decision when the crawler
passed the Quade ranch gates and halted at the top of the rise.
Logan pointed. "Home," he said
softly. Chapter Five Laris seemed to drop into
the Quade ranch as if she had been born there. She learned to
ride with a speed that made it seem as if she'd had only to be
reminded of her skills. That did her no harm with Storm or his
father. Prauo was aloof but sensible with the other beasts of
Storm's team. His longer legs and rangy body carried him miles
alongside Laris's mount as he hardened to the exercise. He hunted
with her, the two so clearly attuned that Storm nodded
approvingly. For Prauo it was all
delightful, but it was the girl whose soul expanded in the
freedom. She reveled in being able to ride down the miles; in the
new sights, sounds, and scents. And in the quick give and take,
the clatter and chatter of family life. Logan was with her
everywhere. It was he who taught her to ride, accompanied her on
those rides, and who sat beside her at meals. They talked, sometimes
casually, sometimes with more seriousness, discussing events on
other planets as seen on the newscasts. Laris started to realize
she had a good mind. She could argue a point and make her reasons
plain. And from the camps and overheard conversations at the
circus on an assortment of planets, she had a hard-headed
appreciation of what could be contributing circumstances to the
problem as disasters unfolded. She'd been there five days when
her own origins came up again. "Logan said you came from
Kowar?" Brad Quade looked at her kindly. Laris heard the unspoken
part of the comment, that she did not look like a Kowar settler.
They'd mostly been from the Asiatic parts of old
Earth. "I said 'sort of,'" she
noted. "I don't really remember. Dedran adopted me out of the De
Pyall refugee camp on Kowar. I'd been in camps for years. That
was just the latest. But I was at the camp there for the last two
years so I think of Kowar as where I came from, I
guess." Brad looked interested.
"What do you remember from before that?" Laris leaned her chin on her
fists. "Not a lot." She thought back. "I was on a ship with
others. No one I knew. I was eight or nine. We landed at Meril
and I was there maybe a couple of years. Before that another
camp. Ermaine I think. The camp before that they called De Pyall
as well. It might have been on Yohal. My mother was still alive.
I think I might have been four or five." Storm looked up. "What
happened to your mother?" "She died," Laris said
briefly. "She got sick. I think there were a lot of deaths in
that camp. A woman looked after me for a while. She went to a
different ship when they moved us again." Brad's voice was gentle.
"Don't talk about this if it distresses you." The girl shook her head.
"It's old. It doesn't bother me." "Then, what do you remember
about your mother? What did others call her when they spoke? Did
she ever tell you stories of some place?" Brad leaned forward.
"Do you remember any names, words that don't match other places
you've been?" Laris looked
back—into the blank times. The times
when she must have been loved and protected. When maybe she'd had
a family of her own. They were still as they had always been for
her ever since. Blank. "I think I was sick when my
mother was. I don't remember much about her. No names or people.
Sometimes I think I dream. But I can't remember anything when I
wake." She shrugged. "It doesn't matter." Brad nodded. "But you know
your name," he said quietly. She answered without
thinking. "I'm Laris. I've always been Laris." "Yes." The tone was
contemplative. "Yes, you are. Your name is the first thing you
learn as a child and probably the last thing you forget. If it
could be discovered where you come from, would you like to
know?" She thought about it.
Knowing wouldn't cut her any slack with Dedran. But it would be
nicer, good to be able to say that she was Laris of a particular
place, not just a camp stray. She felt a sudden surprising flare
of hunger. She'd like to know. She said so and Brad
nodded. "I'll make
inquiries." It was two days later before
something dawned on the girl. If Brad started at the De Pyall
camp on Kowar, the records there would show that she'd been
bonded, not adopted. She thought of trying to persuade Brad to
drop the idea, but it was probably too late. Anyway she could
always say she'd just signed papers. That she'd thought it was an
adoption. After all, she'd been twelve. Uneducated, ignorant,
straight from a camp. Brad would believe that. She was wrong but it would
be months before she found out how wrong. It wasn't spoken about
again until she was due to return to the circus for a
day. "Laris, we'd like you to
come back to the ranch once you've seen the animals are well.
Would you like to do that?" Brad's smile was gentle. "Yes. If Dedran says I can.
It's fun on the ranch." Her rare grin lit up her face. Beside her
Logan bit back a sigh. He loved to make her smile. Laris smiled
seldom and often tentatively, as if she wasn't sure she should.
Considering what his father had discovered so far that wasn't
surprising. Camp records had disclosed that the girl had been
about ten when she arrived on Kowar. No known family. She'd left
again at twelve. Brad had checked how it was
that a twelve-year-old had walked out of a refugee camp. He'd
found her bond registered with another office. Except that the
bond claimed her as sixteen. All of them could guess the reasons
for that. Logan would have discussed their discoveries so far
with Laris but Brad forbade it. "I believe Laris knew she
was bonded but hopes I won't have discovered that. She lied,
probably out of shame; being bonded is quite a stigma on some
planets. A child learns pragmatism in a refugee camp and
accepting a bond was probably her only way out. Letting her know
we've found out would spoil her time here. She wants to know
where she came from and who she is. Leave it lie,
son." Logan had. At almost
twenty-one he was discovering reasons why people could be
fragile, but it had made him gentler with her. Storm, guessing at
more than Logan could know of what Laris's life had been like,
remained suspicious. A child growing up in the camps learned to
care about their own needs first. Ethics would have gone to the
wall as Laris fought to survive. He watched her with Prauo and
later with the meercats and Surra. She was a natural. The animals
liked and trusted her and she seemed to know by instinct what
they wanted. After that thought his gaze on her sharpened; it
could be he was right in his belief, that she had the true beast
master empathy as well. Maybe that was why the
circus boss had bonded her. Anyone whose livelihood or passion
was beasts would pay highly for someone that good. Perhaps his
allowing her to visit the ranch was simply an employer making
sure a valuable employee was content. He let his suspicions lapse
temporarily and rode out with his wife, his brother, and Laris
the next day. Tani was on Destiny, the silver three-quarter
duocorn mare which was her usual mount. Her coyotes put up a merin
deer and all of them chased it laughing, not too serious in the
pursuit. Minou and Ferarre joined in the spirit of it as the deer
ran, their tongues lolling out in amusement. The deer doubled,
twisted, and finally shook them off. She paused to look back at
them from a small rise as her pursuers halted. Laris started to
laugh. "She looks so surprised. As
if she thinks we're all mad." Her laugher was infectious and even
Storm chuckled. "It will keep her in
practice." "Oh," Laris said in
mock-amazed tones. "So that's why we chased her. We're exercising
the wildlife. Maybe we should find a few more. After all, Logan
said that it's the growing season. The animals could be getting
fat. Don't you think it would be a kindness to keep that from
happening?" "Couldn't we just set up a
gymnasium for them?" Tani murmured. "That way they can exercise
and we don't have to do half the work." Storm looked at her. "Deer,
deer. Aren't we lazy." Logan groaned at the pun.
"Puhlease. I only had breakfast a while ago. I may be sick."
Laris was laughing again, a joyous carefree sound which somehow
warmed them all. "It isn't breakfast," she
said sweetly. "It's as I said. Logan's just exercising the
wild..." she paused and added the final word, "life." This time they all moaned.
Tani snorted. "Laris, you're being corrupted. That has to be one
of the worst puns I've heard in years." Laris giggled. Storm
studied her from the corner of his eye. She looked like a child
when she was happy. But she wasn't. Brad said from the records
she must be somewhere between sixteen and seventeen. So far he'd
traced her to Ermaine. Still no more name than Laris. No planet
of origin. No family listed. He knew what it had done to
him to be alone before he found his stepfather and half-brother.
What had it done to her? It hadn't broken her. But things like
that could warp and twist in ways which often weren't apparent to
an outsider. Then too, small children could be amazingly
resilient. Maybe she'd come out of the camps mind-whole. Brad
thought she had, and his stepfather was a shrewd man. Storm sat
back as his mount ambled after the others. Logan liked her. But
Storm was very fond of his younger half-brother. He didn't want
the boy hurt. Ahead, Laris dropped from
her horse to reach out slowly within a small jumble of recently
cracked rock. Prauo came trotting back to stare at her find. She
cradled it in her hand and showed it to them, eyes wide with
pleasure. "I saw the sun catch it.
Look, isn't it pretty?" Storm glanced at the
cat's-eye gem. "It's valuable too." "Oh," she hesitated then
held it up to him. "It was on your land." Storm realized that both his
wife and brother were glaring at him. He shook his head. "Finders
keepers." Logan took it from her
carefully and turned it over in his fingers. "That last frosty
night, it would have split the rock this was in." He touched her
arm. "Storm was teasing. It's pretty but it's the green ones
which are really valuable. This is gold. It isn't a large stone
either. It would take ten or twelve of them to make a green one's
value. But it's yours. You found it. Just don't start digging
holes like a Djimbut to see if you can find more." Laris took the gem back. She
admired the gold color with the black line like a pupil which
split it in two. She pointed. "Is that why they're called
cat's-eye stones?" "Yes. Look." Prauo had moved
to her side and was looking to see what his sister-without-fur
had. "It would look just like one of his eyes if it was purple,"
Logan pointed out. Laris nodded. "But I'd
rather he had his own eyes than I had this. It's very pretty
though." It was, she thought. And Dedran would have it from her
as soon as he saw it and once they were away from Arzor. "What's
a green one worth?" If this one was still quite valuable it might
give her a chance to escape. She could keep Dedran from knowing
about it if she was careful. Logan thought a moment.
"Don't see many green cat's-eye stones. But I think the last
good-sized one went for about five thousand credits on the
market. That gold one would be worth around a hundred credits
maybe, considering the size." Laris kept her face blank
but Storm saw the sudden glitter of her eyes. That had surprised
her. To a camp child a stone worth only a fraction of the value
Logan had quoted on a green cat's-eye gem was still real riches.
He was right. To Laris it meant jumping ship and still having
enough to survive at least a half year on the stone's price. It
could mean safety, freedom from Dedran and the guild. The guild
wouldn't look for her. And they might keep Dedran moving on, too
busy to turn back and seek her out. Smiling, she dropped the
stone in a pocket. She nudged her horse up alongside Logan's
mount and continued an earlier conversation. Tani dropped back
with Storm. "Has Brad found out any more
about her?" "Nope. He's still chasing
through Ermaine's bureaucracy. They closed the refugee camp they
had there about seven years ago. Just over a half year after
Laris was shipped out. They claim that a lot of the records were
dumped after five years." "Claim?" "Uh huh. Brad thinks they're
holding out for a bribe to look." Tani smiled unpleasantly.
"Let me at the com when we get back," she said, referring to the
ranch's method of communication, not only locally, but also
planet to planet. "Aunt Kady would enjoy lighting a fire under a
few bureaucrats. The ark's important to most planetary
governments. Aunt Kady asks, Aunt Kady gets. And if I can tell
her we've got tissue samples from two Terran dogs she hasn't
found before, she'll get those records if she has to go there
herself. I don't think she has many carra samples
either." Storm knew Tani's Aunt Kady.
She was a scientist. Nothing deterred her when she was on a
trail. And it was true she'd be delighted about the dogs. He
touched his mount into a canter to catch up with Laris and Logan.
He addressed the girl. "Would Dedran mind having a
scientist take tissue samples from your carra as
well?" "I don't think so." Laris
frowned. "Why would they want to?" Tani had caught up with
them. She explained how Terra had created a space-faring ark with
beasts and embryos in stasis, with huge tissue banks, all to save
Earth's flora and fauna if the worst happened. "And it did. But
the ark was safe," Tani said softly. "Now my aunt and uncle seek
out other Terran animals or rare ones from other worlds and take
samples to hold. She'll be so pleased about the dogs' samples you
got us already but carra are quite rare too." "What if something happened
to the ark?" Laris was fascinated. "Then we'd still have the
samples. They split those into three. Two others go to planets
with groundside storage facilities. They're held in those as
well. Lately Uncle Brion's been talking about increasing the
groundside places to five. That way it would be even less likely
everything could be destroyed." She started to tell Laris
about her days on the ark. Then how she had come to Arzor. The
girl listened, wondering if she should say anything about the
rumors Dedran had heard. But she didn't know who'd told him.
Maybe he wasn't supposed to know. Tani and Storm had said nothing
and it sounded like an exciting tale. Surely if it was all right
to tell it they would have. In the end she listened with interest
but asked few questions and those carefully chosen. The next week passed
quickly. Then there were only a few more days. Dedran had commed
the ranch to say they would up-ship in five days. The call had
come in late one afternoon, insisting Laris must be back well
before the ship's departure to see to the animals. Few of them
enjoyed takeoff. Some started becoming agitated early as they
understood that the time was coming. She could have another three
days. She hoped Brad would hear
from the Ermaine camp before she had to go. Tani had taken
samples of tissue from the carra and sent those and the dog
tissue to the ark. Kady hadn't received them as yet, although she
had mentioned getting the message asking her to interrogate
Ermaine's people. She'd replied she'd do her best and that was
the last they'd heard. Laris sighed. Perhaps even a
scientist who knew people still hadn't enough influence to open
those files. She dimly recalled some strange events at the camp
shortly before she was transferred. It was likely that
there—as in many places during and after
the war—there'd been corruption. The
people involved wouldn't want records found. And others wouldn't
want such events exposed. It could reflect badly on the current
government. Besides, would all of this be worth the effort? She
was in the ranch house the next evening when she decided to ask
the one who'd know. "Mr. Quade, if Tani's aunt
does get the camp records opened, what could you
find?" "Your full name for a start.
I had a search done in Kowar. They have no record of you as other
than 'Laris.' No last name in their records. But many of the
camp's records simply list the adults of the family who arrived
and note 'with three minor children,' giving only the children's
first names. "If we had your full name we
could track that. Once we had the full records we could trace how
you came there and from what planet." He looked at her kindly.
"It takes time to do that sort of thing, Laris. But governments
thrive on records. They're there somewhere." He paused. "I know
it seems like a long time to you. But it's only ten or twelve
years. A few seconds to a planetary government." The girl twisted her hands
together. "There were some things that went on..." Her voice
trailed away and Brad Quade understood. "In the camps? And you think
some people in power now might not want to remember them? That's
very likely. But I can make it clear to them there's no legal
trouble in mind. Don't worry. I know you have to leave soon. I'll
get the circus schedule and spacegram any information that comes
in. Or won't Dedran like that?" She thought. "I think he
won't mind. But maybe if you sent it to the port office for
collection. I could just pick it up there when we
land." He nodded. "I'll do
that." He returned to the book he
was reading and Laris departed quietly. She adored the excellent
library the ranch owned and understood that a reader liked to
read in peace. She read late most nights in her bedroom and her
companions were amused at the wide variety in her
reading. The three days passed. Laris
sat down to her last meal at the ranch and was conscious of
sadness. Prauo sprawled behind her. He'd eaten earlier but
preferred to stay with Laris. She kept her face blank but the
others were beginning to know that look. It meant that emotion
lurked and the girl was determined not to show it. They combined
to make her laugh, sharing old jokes and retelling amusing
incidents. Finally she excused herself.
If she didn't leave she was going to cry. Laris, who hadn't cried
since she was six and had learned she would never see her mother
again. That she must move on alone. *You are sad,
sister-without-fur.* *I won't see them again.
Dedran's going to do something awful to them and they'll never
forgive me.* *You could warn
them.* She sent nothing in reply.
Better he not know that Dedran had once made a threat which had
turned her heart cold with terror. But the big cat had learned.
He picked it from her mind in part, guessing the rest. *You keep
silent for my sake. Well, they have each other. We have only the
two of us. But if there is a chance, if we escape, then warn
them.* *I will.* She read late that final
night. Losing herself in the adventures of another. She rose to
eat and then to take one last ride with Tani and Logan. Only
Logan was there. "Tani had to talk to people
at the Peaks ranch. It'll be just the two of us. Do you
mind?" She shook her head. How
could she mind a few hours alone with a man she was coming to
care about? But she mustn't think of that. Once Dedran struck,
Logan would hate her. A hopeful part of her mind pointed out that
Logan might never know she'd been involved in whatever Dedran did
to the Quade family. She could get away from the circus
boss. Use the cat's-eye gem to buy passage back to
Arzor. And what, the sensible part
of her brain pointed out, what would she do if she got back and
found Logan had just been being kind to her? How would she feel
if he was surprised to see her? If she was just a nuisance coming
back where she wasn't really wanted? It wasn't Logan's ranch. It
belonged to his father. Mr. Quade had been nice and he was
helping find her background. But then by now he must know a few
things she'd rather he hadn't discovered. He wasn't likely to
want her back either, even if he was being nice about the
records. She rode with Logan,
laughed, and galloped her pony. She hid what she felt and
concentrated on enjoying her hours before she must go. Live for
the day. It was all she had. She had no way of knowing how her
eyes mirrored her thoughts whenever she remembered she was
leaving, even as she twisted her face into a smile. They turned back to the
ranch house in the distance. Laris halted her pony for a brief
moment. She sat looking at the only place where she'd been happy
in so many years. She wondered if her own home, wherever it had
been, had been as nice. Had she had family there? Been a happy
child surrounded with love? She shrugged. What was gone was gone.
She heeled the pony into a gallop and forgot her sorrow briefly
in the joy of speed. "Laris?" She turned to Logan
as they slowed, trotting the ponies into the big
corral. "Yes." "You can come back, you
know. Anytime the circus is on Arzor. You'd be welcome
here." "Thanks. But it's the only
time we've landed here since I've been with them. I guess we may
not be back for years." She held her mouth in a firm line. She
would not whimper like a motherless cub. She would
not! Logan took her hand, glanced
quickly around. No one in sight. He tipped her chin up with the
other hand and brought his mouth down on hers. Her lips were
warm, sweet with a startled half-shy response; then she freed
herself quietly. "Maybe I shouldn't have done
that," he told her. "But I'm not sorry." "Neither am I." Then she was
running for the ranch door. It had felt strange. She'd fought in
the camps to stop anyone touching her and succeeded. Not until
now had she understood how that had deadened her emotions. For
many years she'd touched only Prauo and the animals. With Logan
it had felt good. No coercion. Just safety, warmth. A melting
inside. Her mouth went wry. Logan
hadn't said, "Come back." Just, "Stay with us if the circus is
back on Arzor." And if Dedran knew how she felt he'd never trust
her again. But she couldn't let him harm her friends here. Yet
how could she stop it? She did her best as they dropped her at
the edge of the circus area. "Storm." She held his eyes
with her own, willing him to understand. "Tani's aunt can take
other samples if she meets the circus. Sometimes tissue samples
can be worth a lot. There's always someone who wants to use
things. Other samples, other reasons." She turned away, hoping
he'd understood enough to take care. "Logan, I'll miss you. Thank
you all for letting me stay at the ranch." She spun, hiding her
face as she ran. By the time she and Prauo reached her cabin she
had herself under control again. It was just as well. Dedran met
her. "There's been a message from
Cregar. He was successful at Trastor and he's going on to Lereyne
to meet us there. Get the hidden cage ready. We'll need it for
the wolf he's got. Get on with your work now that you're back."
He paused as he studied her face. "I hope you learned plenty.
You'll have to tell it all to Cregar. Did you get to their place
in the Peaks?" She nodded. "Good. What about security
systems?" "Only corns and computer
lock-codes. No security in the houses apart from the animals.
There is a safe. Lock-coded. I couldn't get the code." That was a
lie but it was a secondary target. Dedran probably wouldn't care
much. He didn't. "Too bad. But Cregar should
be able to get in, gas the beasts, and get out again. What's he
likely to find?" "That depends on what's
there on the day he picks. Unless he's very unlucky there should
be several animals." "Right. Go and fix that
cage. We up-ship in a few hours. I've decided to leave a day
earlier and I let you stay longer. It does seem to have been
worth it but I need you for the animals now." He gave her a
shove. "Don't think you can come back and be idle, my dear ward."
The last words were a sneer as he turned away. Laris nodded. No, she
wouldn't make that mistake. She plodded in the direction of the
animal hold. She was leaving, she could never return, and all her
world was dark right now. Nothing mattered anymore. She worked hard for the next
half day as she reassured the beasts, prepared the hidden cage to
receive Cregar's victim, and now and again listened to
conversations. They were taking on two new people, desperate men
from the port who'd never quite settled on this new world. They
were already planning an act on the high wire. They'd seen it
done, thought it looked easy enough. The girl sighed. Others had thought that. It
was one of the things which brought crowds. This pair would end
up on a new world. But at least here they'd been whole,
undamaged. On Trastor once they'd failed it would still be a new
world but now they'd be injured as well, maybe permanently
crippled or dead. *In which case they'll have
no more problems,* Prauo sent. Laris grinned. The big cat
was such a realist at times. She waited until no one was about
and moved to where the largest cage stood in isolation. It held
the five tigerbats. They sometimes reached out for those who
passed and most people in the circus gave it a wide berth. Just
as well. It had secrets other than the inhabitants. She drifted around to the
rear of the cage, pressed two places on a panel, and leaned hard.
A door-sized piece of the back slid aside. Laris entered,
stooping through the entrance, light already in her hand. She
turned slowly. It wasn't dirty; she could sweep it though. There
was a little dust. There were built-in containers for food and
water. She would bring bedding. *If there is anything left
alive to sleep there,* came to her. She had to agree. Cregar and
his abductions certainly hadn't been so successful in the
past. *I'll clean it and put down
bedding anyway.* She found she was thinking
of Storm as she worked. He was so calm, so self-contained. How
would he react to the disappearance of some of his team? She
wished she didn't have to know about that. Or to be involved. It
was betraying the people who'd been kind to her. Then camp life
came back to her. None of them were her kin. They had no claim on
her. *I too am not kin to you,
sister-without-fur. Yet our hearts are bound together. What of
Logan?* Within the hidden cage Laris
paused in her sweeping. The name conjured up the touch of his
hand on her face, his lips warm and gentle on hers. Sorrow swept
over her. *Logan will never forgive me
if he finds out. And if I ever see him again I think he'd know
just by looking at me. Our only hope is to get away before they
take Storm's beasts.* There was a long silence while she finished
her work. She peered through the tiny viewer in the cage panel,
then the viewer which looked out through the tigerbat portion in
the front. No one was about. She slid aside the panel, stepped
out, snapped it shut swiftly, then emerged from behind the
cage. Dedran caught up with her a
short time later. "Is the cage ready?" "It's clean. I've put in
fresh bedding. The food and water containers have been scrubbed.
I can fill them when the wolf arrives. Everything works well. The
viewer lenses are clean. The panel moves easily and without
making noise." "Very well. Cregar has
messaged. He's coming here. He'll land before we leave. The wolf
will be transhipped to the circus and you'll get the animal under
cover in the cage the minute Cregar is up the ramp.
Understand?" She nodded. Why the change
of plan? What had happened on Lereyne that Dedran would turn
everything on its head and leave earlier than planned? Had Cregar
started some kind of trouble and had to run? She asked no
questions on that score. By the look on Dedran's face it would be
unhealthy. She could ask one question safely. "What about food for the
animal? I could give it some of the carcass the tigerbats
have." Dedran's reply was a snarl.
"Give it whatever is suitable. Damn thing may not be eating
anyway. Just be ready to help once Cregar arrives. We could have
to delay liftoff." He departed, walking in a way which showed he
would like to stamp but didn't want to draw attention. It looked
as if things really had gone wrong somewhere, Laris thought.
Cregar coming here. Liftoff first advanced then delayed. She
wondered if those at the ranch knew about the abduction of a
beast master's wolf. Chapter Six On Quade land, Storm entered
the ranch house to find his father coming to look for him. His
face was hard with anger. "Asizi?" Storm used the Navaho word
in reaction to that anger. "What is it?" "Kady Carraldo has just
spoken to the ranger station at port. They linked corns so she
could speak directly to us. There's been a beast master murdered
on Lereyne. An old employee of hers talked to her from
there." "A beast master," Storm
muttered, shocked. "Murdered how, why?" "Apparently to take the
remaining member of his team. Kady says the man was supposed to
be in the city all day. His wolf was left at home. Those who took
it probably knew all that. The trouble was that the man came home
early. They think he tried to prevent his animal being taken and
someone hit him too hard in a panic." Storm considered
that. "It sounds likely." But his
father's anger was too great to explain it as just the death of a
man none of them knew. "What else?" Brad Quade stared at the
silent com. "Kady says she has been told by authorities there
that it fits other abductions of animals from teams and the
murders of their beast masters. She has no idea why it's
happening but she can now list seven separate occasions beside
this one. There could be more which haven't been passed on as
yet." "But ... but. That must be
almost every beast master left alive after the war." His father shook his head.
"No. Most of the dead were trainees. They had teams but they had
never been in the fighting. Maybe that's why they're being
targeted. They're easier to take than you veterans." Storm's mind was clicking
over. "Get me a list of names and where they were when they died.
How long they'd been there and any other details you can
find." "No need. Kady downloaded
all that over the link. Here." He handed over a sheaf of
paper. Storm reached without looking for the nearest chair,
dragged it to him, and sat, already reading. At last he looked
up. "What do you think,
Asizi?" "You first." "It seems clear to me. The
first killing was a man I served with. He was no pushover and his
team was trained. I'd say the animals fought, he picked up on
that, and came running. He killed a couple of the kidnappers, the
animals got a third and the leader of the kidnappers made a clean
sweep to avoid witnesses. He couldn't get the bodies away so he
picked them clean of ID and left them. The authorities say the
dead men were port scum, they'd do anything if they were
paid." Brad sat back. "Uh-huh. Go
on." "After that whoever was
running this operation decided that us veterans were too tough.
He started trying for trainees. It looks as if he got away with a
few animals but it wouldn't do him any good." "Why not?" Storm's mouth twisted as if
the words tasted sour. "Because with the trainees High Command
was trying something different and more advanced. They were
mind-bonding the trainees' teams to them. Not just a mental link
of the kind I have, more of a complete bonding. The communication
between leader and team was clearer and could reach farther when
they were apart. High Command believed it would work better out
in the field. They found instead that it didn't work as well so
they stopped it after that initial group had been bonded. If the
war hadn't ended they'd have gone back to the way they used with
me." He paused and accepted the
drink Brad offered. "Thanks. Sure the bonding made for a closer
team. A good team could be used almost like your own extensions.
But it was more trouble than it was of use. If a beast master was
injured, his team went berserk. If he was killed, his team would
die. They found that out after there were a couple of training
accidents. If some fool tried to kidnap a trainee team they'd
fight like the possessed. If their leader was badly injured
they'd go crazy. If he was killed they'd die within a few days
too." He sat thinking. "What do we
know? That someone somewhere is trying to steal beast master
animals. If the beast master tries to prevent that he's killed.
It's possibly one man doing it under orders and using local
criminals as gun fodder. But why? It doesn't make
sense." "Would animals like that
breed true? Maybe they're setting up teams of their
own." Storm eyed him grimly.
"They'd breed true if they could keep them alive. Setting up
teams would be harder. But who and for what purpose?" Brad stood. "I'll talk to
Kelson. He's head of the ranger divisions here, and he can reach
security on other planets and be listened to. So can Kady. We'll
alert everyone we can. High Command should have a list of
surviving beast masters and where they went. Brion can talk to
them as well." He turned to reach for the com then grinned wryly
at Storm. "At least it isn't Xiks this time." Storm snorted. "Makes it
worse, not better. Xiks don't know us as well as our own do. I'll
go and find Logan. He can take Surra and the others up to the
Peaks ranch. I want them out of the way just in case." He strode
out, leaving Brad looking after him. Storm still hadn't grasped
Brad's fear. If the trainee beasts all died or were killed as had
already happened to some of them, the hunters would return
looking for the veteran teams again. Storm could be next on the
list. But Storm had understood
very well. He spoke to Logan, then to Kelson. A copter landed a
day later. Surra and her mate were loaded, along with Baku and
Lazo, her mate. Hing came scampering to Storm's call bringing her
tribe. They too were loaded. Logan went with them. He leaned out
before the copter lifted. "What about
Tani?" "She's with the clan. If you
think some port filth could casually drop in there and kill her,
steal the coyotes, Mandy and Destiny, then she's in danger." His
tone was slightly sarcastic. Logan grinned. Half a year
ago Tani had ended a menace to the natives. Not the more
civilized Norbies alone, but also the savage Nitra tribes of
Arzor. She'd been adopted into the Nitra's Djimbut clan as one of
them. It was only the second time in the history of human
settlement on Arzor that it had happened. The Nitra were
warriors, frequently at war with each other. Constantly alert,
and honed into fighters without betters on Arzor. No criminal
from the port would sneak up on the clan. If they thought to do
so they'd have a rude awakening, and a very unpleasant
death. Storm pushed his hand at his
half-brother. "Go, go. I'll talk to Tani when she gets back but
she'd planned to be gone a ten-day. Just take care of yourself."
He watched the copter lift off and then felt a chill run down his
spine. Maybe he'd take his stallion Rain-on-Dust and ride out to
the clan lands. Tani had taken the small comunit but the ride
would be pleasant. Talking at length on the unit was still not
being with her, and he wished to be. She and the clan should be
warned too of a possible attempt on Tani and her team. She was
beast master in abilities and in her bond with her team, but
she'd never been trained in war. There were things he could say
to the clan warriors about the abductions of beasts and the
killing of beast masters which would put them on their
guard. He smiled a little to
himself, and his face warmed in a way seldom seen by any but his
family. He'd still pity a man who tried to separate Tani from her
beasts. His wife might not be trained but there was warrior
heritage there. She would not submit easily. He entered the house
again just as his father clicked off the comceiver. "That was Kady and Brion.
They say we're to take care of their niece." Storm nodded,
waiting. "Brion talked to High Command. They'll com every beast
master they can reach. Several veterans went into the new survey
department that started after the war. They should be safe, half
the time that lot don't know where they are themselves. We can
add another death to that list of Kady's. A trainee again. And
another body they've traced to their port." "How long ago?" "The bodies have been there
for weeks." He stopped Storm's exclamation with a raised hand.
"Not incompetence. The man went off into the bush somewhere,
built himself a hut, and started acting as a ranger for the
native wildlife. It was all on a voluntary basis, he was living
on his veteran's pension, so he had no regular reporting
schedule. They only saw him two, maybe three times a year. He'd
left a message on his com asking callers to call back in a few
weeks. He said he was off on a survey of wildlife
numbers." Storm swore bitterly.
"Either someone knew that or they were just lucky. I suppose
someone wanted to talk to the man and couldn't wait, or he'd
still be out there." "Us, we started it. High
Command passed on the warning. One of his ranger friends in the
wildlife department thought he should know at once. When they
kept getting the same message someone else remembered they'd
called him a month back and heard it before. His friend went out
just in case and to pass on the warning. They found him dead with
another body, and signs others had been hurt. His beasts were all
dead as well, killed apparently while fighting to protect their
master or to keep from being taken. They can't be one hundred
percent certain but they think the deaths occurred thirty-five to
forty days ago." Brad and Storm sat thinking
silently. At last Brad spoke again. "I'd say that it might be a
good idea to ride out and talk to Tani and the clan about all of
this." "I'm going in the morning.
I'll suggest either she stays out with the clan or she goes up to
the Peaks ranch to stay with Logan." His stepfather rose slowly.
"Well enough. Get some sleep then." He remembered something.
"Wasn't Logan going down to the port to see that girl
leave?" "Uh-huh. He's catching a
ride with Kelson. The man's running around holding meetings about
frawn numbers just now. Some of the ranchers are risking
over-grazing their land up there. Then Kelson will take him back
to the Peaks later on. Don't worry, Asizi. Everything will
be well." But he felt again that small cold shiver and
wondered. In the ship Laris finished
tucking the wolf away in the hidden section of the cage. It was
breathing badly and she was concerned. Cregar stood beside her
looking down at it. "It isn't
injured." "There are different kinds
of injuries," Laris said sadly. "I don't think this one will make
it either. Tell Dedran I'll do my best but it's samples he's
likely to be sending on. Not a live beast." From the corner of
her eye she caught a half-satisfied look on the man's face.
Didn't he want the guild to succeed then? Cregar grunted and
walked to peer from the viewer. "No one is about. Make very
sure no one sees you coming in or out of that cage. There are
half a dozen governments who would hang us all if they ever find
out we're responsible for kidnapping Terran animals and killing
beast masters. It's only a matter of time too before the
authorities on one of the planets who've lost animals post a
reward." He saw her flinch. "Once that happens everyone in any
port will be on the lookout for something odd to use to try and
claim a reward. You know Dedran. Bring him down and he'll make
sure we all go with him. Only way for us to be safe would be if
he's dead before the authorities find him." The last words had
been spoken almost to himself. He slid the panel aside and
stepped through, closing it with a quiet click behind him. Laris
stared after him. Now what had that last comment meant? Was he
suggesting she should kill Dedran? Or that Cregar might? She sat
down beside the sedated animal and smoothed its fur. Poor beast,
it hadn't asked to be kidnapped and brought here. She'd try to
keep it alive, but was that right? Would it want to live without
friend or kin? She turned the thought
aside. She couldn't kill it. Humans had done enough to cause it
distress. Not that it would matter. About her she could feel the
small sounds which indicated liftoff shortly. She must go out.
Dedran would want her to pass on his orders, check other animals.
She hoped that Logan might find time to see her before the ship
lifted. Dedran did want her. He kept
her busy until suddenly Logan appeared. Then the circus boss
smiled. Laris eyed that look suspiciously. It boded no good for
someone when the man looked that pleased with himself. He placed
a heavy hand on her shoulder. "Take your friend into the
small group cabin. You have half an hour to say your good-byes
then he'll have to go." The small group cabin, Laris
noted. And that's bugged. He'll know every word we say. But if we
don't go then I'll pay later on. There'll be a chance on the way
back though. I can say he grabbed me, kept kissing me and
wouldn't let go. That's if Dedran realizes we took a while longer
to get to the ramp after we left the cabin. She'd chance that.
Although maybe she could encourage Logan into suggesting a side
trip somewhere. To see the animals again perhaps. They reached the cabin, she
slid the door shut, and Logan started talking. Laris bit back a
groan as she saw where his warnings were leading. He was afraid
for her. But he was revealing at the same time just how much was
known. Dedran would be interested, furious, and afraid. Someone
out there was stealing animals. The smart ones. Prauo might be
taken, or her tigerbats, Logan insisted. She must be careful.
These people had killed again and again. She couldn't shut him up too
abruptly. Dedran would listen to this. If he was suspicious of
her she could do nothing and might not survive. Laris waited
until a suitable place in Logan's warnings. "So I had to let you know
before you left." She laid a finger softly against his lips. He
had more to say but she'd prefer Dedran didn't hear
it. "You're kind. Thank you but
I'll be safe here." She pointed at the door, raising her
eyebrows. Now if only he didn't say the wrong thing. Logan
assumed she wished to show him the animals to demonstrate their
safety. He nodded. "Of course. It's unusual for
anyone to have five of them." She had the door open and was
leading him out quickly, before he opened his mouth again and
said something Dedran could use. She was too late. Logan halted in the doorway
to talk again. "You will be careful. Storm's got me tucked away
up at the Peaks ranch with his beasts. Tani's with the Djimbut
clan in the lower foothills. We're safe but I worry about
you." Laris kept her voice steady
with a huge effort. He'd just told Dedran everything the circus
boss would need to know in order to find Storm or Tani's teams.
"Don't worry. I'll be all right." Too true she would be. Because
Cregar was going to be at High Peaks just as soon as the circus
was on Lereyne and innocently doing shows for the local
population there. Logan gathered her into the
circle of one arm. "Are you sure? There'd be no objections if you
wanted to come back with me." He stopped abruptly. Damn. She
couldn't do that. Brad had said the girl was bonded to Dedran, no
matter that the man had referred to her as his ward. Laris was thinking quickly.
Dedran wouldn't release her. The bond had several months yet to
run. The circus boss would see to it that Laris didn't take
Prauo. She had no proof of ownership and he could delay legal
attempts to repossess Prauo, up-ship, and then claim Prauo had
died on the trip. Apart from that, Cregar was planning to steal
Storm's or Tani's beasts. If he succeeded she might be the only
one standing between Dedran and a dead team. She remembered Hing and her
troop. Small, merry, and so charming, Laris had been constantly
giggling whenever she watched them. Surra, beautiful in her pride
and dignity, so gracious toward her mate. And the eagles, Baku
who had unbent sufficiently to accept a piece of meat from
Laris's hand. No, if Dedran succeeded she must be at the circus.
Her presence might save them still. She mourned inside but she
must not show that. She smiled, her mouth
stretching upward but her eyes miserable. "No, I couldn't leave
the circus. I have a place here. And anyway, I'm quite certain
I'll be safe. Now come and see the tigerbats before you have to
leave." Logan followed her. He
admired the five carnivores who watched him sleepily. The largest
came to be stroked. "It's amazing how gentle he
seems when you know what they can do." "They aren't vicious," Laris
objected. "They're just predators. Kreel is quite clever." She
sighed. "I wish one day they could go back home. I know they
couldn't ever be free to swarm again. But if they had a really
large pen so they could have a few babies..." Logan gaped. "Some are
females in there?" "Of course." She pointed at
the two smaller tigerbats. "They are. I have to put a
contraceptive in their water so they can't breed. We've only had
them a year and they're two. Too young to breed safely as yet.
But it would be so nice for them if they could have a family one
day." Without thinking Logan
hugged her. "You have a good heart." Laris stiffened then relaxed
in his arms. He lowered his mouth to hers and for long seconds
they clung. Then she freed herself gently. "I have to take you down the
ramp. Dedran will be expecting to see you leave." He allowed her
to walk with him to where Dedran was indeed waiting. The tall man
glared as they came in sight. Logan took her hand and held
it briefly. "We shall look forward to seeing you again if you
land here." He nodded politely to Dedran. "You too, Honored Sir.
But I must hurry, there's always work." He turned to look at
Laris, his face hidden from the circus boss. Out of the man's
sight Logan's lips framed words. "We have a place for you
always." Then he was hurrying down the ramp to where Kelson
waited impatiently. The ship's ramp whined as it was raised to
close. The last sight Laris saw was Logan's hand waving as they
drove away. She made her face blank as she turned. Dedran caught her by the
shoulder. "Don't get ideas, girl. That fancy first-ship family
would never touch you if they knew what you were." Laris spun. "What was I?"
she snarled despite herself. "I was an orphan like a million from
the war. I was bonded illegally and we both know it. I've never
done anything to be ashamed of." Dedran smiled at her furious
face. His own eyes were cold and dead. "Dear, dear. Is that what
you think? And how would your fancy friends like to hear that
you've been up to your little neck in espionage, theft, and
murder? I can prove you've helped me often enough with the first
two. And you knew what Cregar did on his trips. It was you who
cared for the animals and took samples when they died. Try
convincing any authority you were innocent." He smiled again as
her defiance wilted, shoulders hunching in surrender. She'd
showed signs of becoming too interested in the Quade boy. It felt
good to remind her that she was merely property. "Get on with your work. We
have clearance to lift." He walked arrogantly away, pausing at
the end of the passage to make sure she was obeying his
instruction. She kept her cowed look as
she headed for the animal hold. Let the circus boss believe he
had convinced her there was no hope of using the Quades to escape
Dedran's grip. But inside she was recalling something she'd
accessed in the library at Yohal. There was a law on all
Terran-settled planets stating that a bond-servant could not be
held accountable for her master's misdeeds or her own under
orders if she had no opportunity to inform, she feared crippling
reprisals if she attempted to inform and failed, or—if she was in danger of death, or
if she was saving another under that same threat. Laris could
plead three of the four; the last for Prauo. She'd also been bonded
illegally young as she could prove with the camp records. She
could claim duress on a minor which would be even more
convincing. Cases she'd read showed that courts tended to look
even less favorably on punishing a child forced into crimes. She
set about her chores with a lighter heart. Her reading skills
might save her yet. Chapter Seven Laris worked on, knowing
that Dedran would be listening to the record of her talk with
Logan. In a few days he'd ask her to expand on the Peaks ranch.
Her bond-master and Cregar would want to know all she could tell.
Well, she had an idea there. She started to think it out as she
cleaned cages, fed and watered their occupants. What she had in
mind just might work. It would delay an attack on Storm's beasts
if some of the things Logan had told her were
true. She smiled savagely to
herself. It would take careful handling. She'd have to make
Dedran think it was his idea. But if she said just the right
things the circus boss could take the bait. Cregar was under
orders and why should he know any more about Arzor than the
circus boss knew? She'd accessed the information available in the
ship's library often enough to know all the library had about
Arzor. Laris had listened to Logan
as he talked about the natives of Arzor. He'd told her old
stories, native customs. And something of the vast and often
savage desert lands in which the wild Nitra clans lived. The ship
records had said almost nothing about Arzor, save to note that
the natives were mostly friendly. The men would accept
that. Eyes opened behind her own.
*Be cautious, sister-one. Too little said is better than too
much.* *Come with me and listen
when he calls me then. Maybe you can think of something to say.*
Prauo was not a talker without cause but his advice was good once
he did. *I will do that.* The intercom on the hold
wall began to whistle her name. Dedran wanted to speak to her.
She obeyed, trotting from the hold with deliberate haste. Let him
also believe that she was eager to be cooperative in the face of
his threats. Dedran eyed her prompt
arrival with approval. Bondservants. They all needed a touch of
the whip occasionally. The girl was more valuable to him than she
knew but if she did not bend to his designs, then he'd have to
break her. He addressed the small
figure as she stood before him submissively. "Sit down." She
obeyed. "Now, I've listened to your talk with this Logan. So he's
going to High Peaks ranch. Tell me about it." Laris talked, making the
difficulties sound just a bit greater than they were. "So they send few copters up
there," she informed him. "The winds as they come from the peaks
are dangerous. Logan will have coptered to the lower reaches of
their land, then ridden the rest of the way." She watched as he
absorbed that then shifted to prattle about the
animals. "And they have coyotes.
They're so cute, and smart—why once I saw them..." She
recounted a hunting story making much of the animal's
intelligence. "They're a mated breeding pair too. It's a pity,
but they won't be at the Peaks. Storm's wife took them to some
native camp to hunt again. But you want the others, not a pair of
coyotes." "Don't tell me what I want,"
Dedran said absently. Laris kept her face bland and submissive.
Had he taken the bait? He looked at her. "Tell me about this
Tani. Is she a trained beast master?" He had! She shook her head.
"No, Storm said once she has the abilities. But the war ended too
soon. She was never even in the services. Her aunt and uncle are
scientists and she worked with them. Mostly washing bottles and
lab equipment I think." She mustn't make him think Tani worth
taking or killing. "She's only about nineteen I think." A lie but
Dedran might not know, she thought. Tani didn't look older and
he'd only seen her briefly a couple of times. Dedran equated age
with wisdom, youth with stupidity. Let him see Tani as no
threat. Dedran scowled thoughtfully.
"Tell me about this girl and the coyotes." A mind voice came, *Quickly,
protest their importance.* Laris wrinkled her forehead.
"But she's not even trained. And if you take one of the coyotes
it would pine away like some of the other animals you've brought
in." "You said she has the
abilities, and so do her animals, yes?" "Well, so Storm said. But
he's her husband. He could have been just, well, bragging about
it." *Well done,
sister-without-fur. Gently, not too firm.* "I don't know. Anyway, Tani
and her team are over on the fringe of the desert. It'd take
longer to get to them." She allowed her face to frown a little.
"Of course Storm did say it was easy to get there in a copter.
There isn't the same wind gust problem as they have at High
Peaks..." She allowed her voice to trail away. Dedran nodded once in
decision. "I'll want you to speak to Cregar tomorrow. Tell him
all you know about this girl and the coyotes. I presume you have
some idea of where the natives she's visiting are
camped." Laris agreed. Logan had
talked about the Djimbut clan and their lands enough to allow her
to give some direction to Cregar's search. "Then get out and check that
wolf. Is the stupid brute going to survive or are we talking
samples from another dead beast?" Laris mumbled that the
latter was probable and fled. To her distress that information
was almost certainly true since the will to live was broken in
the large gray animal. It lay there refusing to eat or drink. She
could provide nourishment intravenously but when she'd tried that
before, the wolf had roused as soon as she left just enough to
rip the tube free each time. She was using stimulants but they
had worked with less and less effect. She had kept it alive for
several days but she was losing the battle and knew
it. Inside herself she raged at
the necessity of torturing the animal. But if she didn't Dedran
would see that someone else did who would be less kind. She
counted. Five days since liftoff. If the wolf died now Dedran
wouldn't blame her. She'd kept it alive long enough to show she
was trying. She removed the tube, cut off the trickle of
stimulant, then stroked the harsh pelt. She bent over and
whispered softly into one furred ear. "Go free, friend. Run free.
I give you leave to go." The lungs heaved up,
hesitated, and then the breath went out slowly. The body seemed
to flatten. She waited a few minutes to be sure before taking
with a steady hand the samples Dedran would require. She placed
those in the chiller, labeled them, added a warning to the lid,
and went to find the circus boss. "The wolf died. It tore out
the tubes again while I was with you. I've taken the samples.
They're safely in the chiller. Three sets." He hurled a paperweight at
the wall. "I had it! It wasn't even hurt. Damned beasts, damned
beast masters." His eyes suddenly looked frightened as his voice
dropped to a hoarse whisper. "I have to get one that stays alive.
Maybe a beast would stay alive if its mate was with it." He
turned on Laris. "Get out!" She edged to the door as he slumped
in his seat. Her ears caught his mutter as she slid the door
shut. "Nhara will kill me if I
fail." Nhara? Laris drove the name
deep into her mind. It sounded like an inner systems name. She
wondered if Nhara might well be Dedran's mysterious patron and
backer. She'd long since deduced that Dedran owned only a small
percentage of the circus. It was a decoy, used as a screen, as
through it moved people and animals which would have been noticed
as illegal in some way without it. Cregar came to talk about
Tani and the coyotes just before the Lereyne landing. He listened
to all Laris could say. Dedran was there as well and the men
talked over the girl's head. "Coyotes are smart even
without genetic enhancement." That was Cregar. "So why did the beast master
HQ switch mostly to wolves?" "I'm not certain. I think
they may have found coyotes more independent. Wolves are pack
animals." Dedran was onto that. "So
coyotes are less likely to suffer separation trauma, and with the
girl not having been trained at all they may be less strongly
bonded." He smiled nastily. "Think of it, Cregar. You could even
end up with them bonded to you." He turned to Laris. "You say the
girl went to this native camp alone? None of her family are with
her?" "She went alone but," Laris
said, choosing her words carefully, "there's nothing to say one
of the family won't go after her. Although I did get the
impression she was to stay there alone several weeks. But I could
be wrong." That should cover her. If anything happened then she
could quote her own words. She hadn't been sure and had said
so. Dedran discounted her
warnings as she'd expected. He had fastened onto this idea of a
young harmless girl unable to protect two enhanced beasts. Two
animals bonded to each other as a mated pair. He discounted the
natives too. Dedran came originally from a long-settled inner
planet. Any native race there had died out long before humanity
lifted its face to the stars. He despised native races as
primitive. He'd never been called on to live as they did and had
no idea of how much intelligence and ingenuity—and ferocity—such a life could take. They were only a step up
from the animals they used, he thought. Cregar could copter in,
sneak up after dark, stun as many as was necessary, and escape
with the stunned coyotes. He could pick up assistance from local
criminals as always. Make sure they had no ID. Hire the copter
under a false name. And anyway, one thing he had found about
Arzor: The native lands were theirs by treaty. The natives had no
copters and by government decree no one over-flew tribal lands.
It would take them days to get a message out about his raid. By
then Cregar would be long gone. He waved the girl to the
door and gave Cregar his orders. "I want both coyotes undamaged.
Stun them. Try not to kill any of the natives or the girl either.
The Quade boy was talking to Laris in one of the bugged rooms.
Too many people are beginning to put two and two together and
they're getting a conspiracy against beast masters as their
answer. Take as many men as you need and stun the whole camp if
you have to. Set their horses free, and stun everyone again
before you leave. It should give you enough of a head
start." "Uh-huh. Baris and Ideena
were heading here the last I heard of them." He gave a hard grin.
"I had a contact of mine keep a watch on what they were doing.
You know, Dedran, I could use that scout ship of theirs. If I
offer them the right to loot the camp before we get out they'd
take me in and off Arzor again without declaring a passenger. If
Arzoran security start looking for anyone it would be for
them." "And if they get themselves
killed you could fake voice-prints and lift off with a sweet ship
to add to our outfit. They aren't guild." Dedran agreed slowly.
"I like it. Talk to them. Offer them anything but let them set
the price." His eyes met those of the man opposite him. "And if
the natives don't kill them, maybe they still won't make it
back." "I think that's possible.
I'll look for them as soon as we land." He stood and left the
cabin. A man couldn't choose the ones he worked with. A pity. But
the money was good and the chance of beasts again sounded even
better. But he'd see to it that his hirelings didn't harm the
Tani girl. She wasn't a real beast master. Not one of those who'd
stood by and let him be dumped like rubbish. He'd allow her to
live. Since she wasn't trained the loss of her team wouldn't be
so bad anyhow. He went to his cabin, laid down, and dreamed of
days long past when one was many and all were one. He was near the cages the
next day, gazing at the beasts as Laris scurried to and fro in
her work. He noticed her struggling to move a larger box of
supplies from the top of several others, and moved forward just
as the box began to tilt dangerously downward. It had been
heavier than Laris expected as it slid toward her. Cregar jumped
forward, realizing if it fell on the child she could be injured.
His hands closed on the box's handles and he caught it before
lowering it down safely with her help. He glanced at
her. "Be careful, if you are hurt
Dedran won't be pleased." Her mouth twisted into a wry
smile. "I know." He turned to leave and without thinking she
spoke. It was the old custom of the camps binding her to a fair
exchange. The man had maybe saved her from injury, a favor of the
same kind was owed. "Cregar?" He turned to
listen. "Don't discount the natives on Arzor. Logan told me
they're warriors. A clan can fight like a tigerbat swarm." He
said nothing, only nodded in reply before he left again, but
Laris was satisfied he'd understood her warning. They touched down on Lereyne
to find that Dedran's forerunners had whipped up crowd enthusiasm
to almost a frenzy. Cregar faded into the crowd seething on the
port periphery, watching the circus set up on the back lot. He
found Baris drifting quietly along, eyes flicking from side to
side. Cregar could have taken the idiot right there. But he
wanted to use the pair as long as possible. And it would fire the
other man's touchy pride. Cregar half turned away and
waited. Crats, but the man was clumsy. He'd sensed him sneaking
up minutes before he closed in to hand range. He encouraged his
body to flinch when the hand tapped him lightly on the shoulder.
Turning, he had time to see the gratified look in Baris's eyes.
The man had been a skulker, a scavenger, and a hanger-on during
the war and in some ways he'd never gotten over not being a real
fighter. Now it delighted him that
he'd successfully surprised one who'd not only been a warrior,
but one of the elite. Cregar allowed him his moment of triumph
before beginning negotiations. Ideena was more
suspicious. "What's in this for
you?" She was sniffing at the
bait. Now to set the hook. "We'll both do well," Cregar told her
calmly. "For us, I get the beasts Dedran wants. You'll be
transporting me and them free. I'll split the cost of those we
hire. For you, Dedran had his little snooper staying with the
family there for weeks. She says that the Storm woman is off
visiting with a native clan." He leaned forward and splayed a set
of photos across the table. "Ever seen something like
this?" Ideena gaped. "Cat's-eye
gems." She stared at him, her tongue flicking out to lick her
lips. "Where?" He smiled. He had her now.
"Where'd you think? Arzor, where I want to go. That's the world
which produces them. The Thunder-talkers there wear sets like
this. Thunder-talkers are their witch doctors and they always
wear the most valuable green gems as their symbols. Some of the
wealthier clan people would have lesser jewels. The ones in gold
or red maybe. Those photos are from the early days. Now the
planet holds a native treaty in place. They don't go onto native
lands, they can't hunt there or even fly-over without specific
clan permission." He added one further comment, his voice
stressing the words slowly. "And the clans have only
bows and arrows. They ride horses. No guns, no copters, no
nothing." Ideena's eyes were
glittering. "And any clan would have a
Thunder-talker." "And any Thunder-talker
would have a set of gems like these, maybe better," he
confirmed. She exchanged looks with
Baris. "We're in. But we get to check the whole clan if there's
time." "There should be. If there
isn't we can just stun them again." He watched her. Ideena looked
at Baris who signaled acceptance. "All right," she said.
"We're definitely in. But any tricks, Cregar, and Baris'll feed
you to those damn beasts you're snatching." "I'm interested in the
animals, and getting in and out with my hide and no peacekeepers
on my tail. That's all. But while you're giving out warnings take
one for yourself." He fixed her with his eyes until she nodded.
"Good. When can you lift off?" Ideena consulted Baris in a
low mutter as they walked to the ramp. Baris seemed to be
protesting. She overrode that and turned to Cregar. "Tomorrow
morning at the earliest. We need supplies, and Baris has
something he wants to do." Cregar would have bet on it.
At the very least Baris would be planning some way to make sure
they weren't tricked. Considering the man, it wouldn't be
anything too subtle though. And since neither of this precious
pair would want anyone knowing their business, they'd be unlikely
to be planning the timeworn "leaving an envelope with someone to
be opened" routine. There was always a chance that trick would go
wrong, and the envelope used to convict them of
something. He waved graciously.
"Tomorrow morning then. And I'll contribute to supplies. That's
fair." He handed over a hundred-credit note, contriving to brush
against Baris's sleeve as he did so. The tiny bug should stay
there long enough. He'd planted two larger bugs already. One
under the table here, and another by their ship's ramp. Ideena
would expect that. She'd look, find them, and be satisfied. But
they were meant to be found. Now he flicked three more from his
fingertips when neither quarry was watching. One bounced off and was
lost. The other two clung to Ideena's clothing near the hem. Not
an ideal spot but they had good amplification. He should be able
to hear what this pair said. He left the duo with protestations
of comradeship and hurried to a secluded place behind a shed.
Then he thrust the receiver into his ear hastily. Baris was
complaining. "Why can't we just murder
the creep once we lift off? We can dump his body into the sun and
keep going." Ideena's voice would have
etched steel. "Baris, you idiot. If we do that how are we going
to find out where this clan is?" "Who says we need that
particular clan?" "I do. If we get picked up
for any reason before we're clear, well, we're just innocent
traders accepting a hired collection job. We had no idea what the
man was doing. When we found out, we were out over the desert in
a copter filled with his men. You get us new IDs in some unlisted
name before we lift. If they run us they find nothing. If they
run Cregar they get..." It was clear that a great
light was dawning on Baris. "Oh, I see. That's clever of you,
Ideena. They'll get his record and then they'll believe
us." "Riiight," Ideena drawled.
"So we dump him after we score and get clear. He thinks we're
going in without listing him as a passenger, but we do more, we
list him as having hired us. If nothing does go wrong Dedran will
likely pay well to have these animals back even if Cregar doesn't
come with them. Just see to it that Cregar can't steal the ship
and we'll make out like pirates." "What do you mean 'like
pirates'? We are pirates." There was a lot of chuckling
and Cregar removed the receiver. He took a small flat object from
his belt, set several buttons, hooked it back, and strolled into
the port crowds again. He'd let the recorder pick up anything
else they said for a while, and he'd play it back every few
hours. But Baris and Ideena would be busy most of the day. It
would be later when they had their errands out of the way that
what they said might have some bearing on him again. He reported back to Dedran.
"They're not intending to do anything until we leave Arzor. But I
need a clean ID for myself and a set of theirs with their true
identities. I'll plant theirs somewhere half smart. If we get
picked up by any authorities I'll be clean and it'll be that pair
who'll have to be answering questions." He smirked. "There's times
when I can hardly keep track of who's double-crossing who in this
game. Hang on a moment." He activated the recorder and listened.
"Nothing, just supplier trading. Listen, we'll be using their
ship to get to Arzor and do the grab on the animals. One thing
Baris and Ideena will do is try to fix their ship so I can't lift
off on my own without them. Any ideas how they might be able to
do that?" Dedran considered. "Nothing
you shouldn't be able to counter if you drop them at some stage
and can pick over them and their gear for any lockchip. They'd
probably use one of those to freeze their ship's controls. But if
you have to make a run for it and lose them..." He thought. "Take
an all-purpose memorychip. If they take a chip out of the
navigationcomp the ship won't lift. Or if they run a null program
to keep the programming wiped. Put a memorychip in and it
bypasses the null program or the lack of a proper
chip." Cregar nodded. "Sounds okay.
But keep thinking. I'll see you before I lift. If I don't come
back neither do your animals." He didn't have to mention that if
the authorities collected him because Baris and Ideena had been
able to dump Cregar first, then if Cregar was still alive he'd
have no reason not to talk to the Arzoran authorities and save
his own skin. If he gave them someone higher up the chain they'd
give him immunity and a new ID. He'd talk selectively of course.
Enough to have them out looking for Dedran the
mastermind. Not enough to encourage a
guild contract. But that would still leave Dedran doing several
lifetimes—depending on the planet which
caught him and for what. Some had the death penalty for many of
Dedran's activities. And Dedran had no one farther up the chain
he could talk about. Too many of those were heavy into the guild,
who'd forcibly resent it. Not that Cregar had to say any of this,
he didn't have to, it was what Dedran would do if he was the one
caught first. His smile was bitter—what a life. Turn in your
companion before he turned you in. Trust no one, make no friends,
never stay long in any place. How had he come to this? Cregar spent much of the day
on the move, but he sat in to watch the afternoon show. It went
well and the crowd stood to applaud at the end. Judging by the
number of people turned away at the door, Dedran would be able to
stay here for weeks without suspicion. He checked out the
recorder as he checked back with the circus boss. Neither had any
more worth hearing. Cregar headed toward the ramp, then
halted. There was one other thing
which bothered him. But there wasn't much he could do about it.
He turned away and stood looking indecisively into the animal
hold. At the far side he could see the girl grooming a tigerbat.
They'd be setting up for the evening show soon. Cregar cursed in
a soft, tired voice. He was a fool. But he trusted Laris more
than he did any other person, and she'd warned him. He'd
understood her earlier comment to him about the natives, they
weren't quite as passive as the ship's library made them out to
be. With that warning in mind he'd added a precaution or two for
his trip into the clan lands. Dedran had talked recently
about his plans for the child. Here on Lereyne they had the
arenas as they had on several other worlds. In them, beasts
fought for their lives. On Lereyne the sport was frowned upon
socially although it was not illegal. However, the nonacceptance
meant that it was very difficult to acquire good beast trainers.
Dedran would like to sell Laris for that purpose, unless her bond
expired before he could do so, or the child found enough credit
to escape. And if she thought what he would tell her now was only
about money—the child was as honest as she
could be with Dedran as bond-master. He caught her eye and
signaled her to come to him in silence. She obeyed, then stood
listening as he spoke in the camp slang he'd learned in low
ports, using a very soft, carefully blurred voice. None could
lip-read that or even pick it up understandably with a wall bug
or directional mike. "If I don't come back, I
gotta a stash 'a credits. Want you ter have them. They behind a
panel, room next t' mine." He gave swift directions and waited to
see she understood. "Why'n me?" "If 'n I don't need them 'ny
more what matter. Take 'em and get out. Swear oath, no touchin'
'til it's sure I'm gone. Then use 'em to leave. Oke?" She met his eyes firmly.
"Swear oath," the same carefully blurred voice repeated. She put
out a shy hand and brushed her fingertip over his arm. "You'm
take care 'n thanks." She was gone, back to her tigerbat grooming
and Cregar was left shaking a little. He forced calm and left
without meeting Dedran. He found himself wondering, if he'd
stayed in the service, if he'd married, if he'd had a daughter,
would she have been like that one? He hoped so. Then he scoffed
at himself. He was getting soft in his old age. Laris was just
another camp brat, but—she was better than most. The
girl had warned him, risking the circus boss's anger if he'd
heard that, and Cregar had heard her tell Dedran earlier that
Cregar was a fine trainer. Something inside of him was warm
remembering her words. Let the kid get out if she had the chance;
if he went down on this trip his credits would be no use to him
anyway. He turned into the street
where the shop should have his requirements, his thoughts
returning to the circus. If Laris stayed there Dedran would fake
an open bond and sell the child to be a beast trainer for one of
the arenas. She would fight that—and her new owners—and be broken, something he didn't
wish to happen. He put it all out of his mind as he entered the
store and settled to bargain for one of the all-purpose
shipchips. They came high and he wasn't wasting
credit. Fortunately he didn't have
to. Lereyne was a fishing planet with a number of
ports—and all the shops which catered to
them. On the huge inland sea there were canneries, fish-drying
factories, and a host of fishing boats, along with the people who
worked on the boats and in the factories. The volume of foreign
cargo ships which ported on Lereyne not only made it an excellent
place to stop for a circus, it also made it a good place to buy
small, normally high-cost, portable items. Cregar bought an
all-purpose secondhand shipchip for a price which made his smile
stay in place all the time he searched for Baris. Chapter Eight Cregar found Baris. The man
was gambling again but with skill. From what the ex-beast master
knew, Baris often supplemented his and Ideena's income with some
clever cheating but only on planets not sophisticated enough to
have checking programs in place. The penalties for being caught
cheating ranged from forced bond to death depending on the world
and its laws. Nor would Baris bother with
the inner worlds, where monetary systems were mainly on personal
or general memorychips. They depended on IDs which were almost
impossible to forge, and their gambling payouts were transferrals
from one chip to another. Baris wouldn't gamble on such worlds;
they gave nothing portable and anonymous. Computer winnings on
such worlds could be too easily tracked from planet to planet. He
signaled Baris who raked in a stack of credits and
nodded. "Thank you, friends. I must
go now as I warned you." He flicked a couple of credits across to
the dealer. "Drinks on me." He bowed to the gamblers around the
table. "I salute you. It's as well I'm leaving before fortune
frowns and I lose my very boots." Cregar noted the grins. So,
Baris had been cheating a bunch of rich amateurs. A good touch.
He'd warned them he'd have to leave when a friend showed up. Paid
for drinks, and left them with a compliment. By their looks, they
had no suspicion they'd been done. They thought of Baris as a
nice man and merely a good gambler with luck on his shoulder.
Cregar made a mental note of that. Baris was a better
psychologist than he'd thought. Judging by the stack of credits
he'd scooped up he'd sheared this bunch and left them liking
it. Baris joined him. "Nice
people, terrible gamblers." His smile was satisfied. "Ideena will
be pleased. I made back everything we spent on supplies
earlier." Cregar hid a wince. "How
long were you at the table?" "Five hours. Come on, Ideena
wants us back at the ship. She plans to lift off as soon as we
get clearance." Obediently Cregar hurried.
Five hours, he was thinking as he trotted along. Baris must have
tossed in the occasional hand and built up a slow but steady
trickle of hands won. No huge pots. No obvious runs of too-good
fortune. Just a quiet bleeding of credits across the table in
Baris's direction. He'd have used sleight of hand to drop credits
into his pockets. No buildup of those on the table. With them out
of sight and Baris not seen pocketing them either, there'd have
been nothing to remind the others that they kept
losing. Cregar wasn't a gambler
himself. Most professionals in that field had a touch of ESP. His
own abilities didn't lean in that direction, but he knew how it
was done. It was one of the first things they taught beast
masters, so they didn't get caught in any traps. He'd survived
long enough to learn that as well as other things. He didn't
realize his lips had peeled back in a snarl. They'd taught him,
shown him heaven—then torn it away from him,
leaving him empty and bleeding for the rest of his life. They
would pay. At the ship Ideena was
waiting. "What kept you?" Her tone softened when Baris grinned
and began turning credits from his pockets. "Well done. No
trouble?" He snorted. "Bunch of
amateurs. Rich kids wanting to show they knew what was what. I
trimmed them good an' they never knew a thing. They'll still be
down there drinking the credits I left and saying what a nice guy
I was." Ideena was counting the
notes and coins. "This'll cover what I spent for supplies.
Nothing like a free trip." She eyed Cregar. "But there's still
fuel. You'd better make this worthwhile, Circus Man. Get to your
cabin and strap down. I've already got clearance. We lift in a
few minutes." Cregar nodded and left. He
opened doors. The first two cabins clearly belonged to Baris and
Ideena. The next was empty. He dropped his bag into a chest
bolted to the floor, rolled onto the bunk, and fastened the
shockweb harness. Just a couple of minutes later the small ship
shivered and leapt skyward. Cregar was mulling over something
Ideena had given away. She had to have known Baris had met him
and that they were on their way to the ship. Without knowing that, she'd
hardly have asked for liftoff clearance. This was an active port.
It was the clearing area for the trade of several planets. Ships
large and small came and went busily. If Ideena had asked for
clearance and then aborted they'd have dumped her to the back of
the queue. Therefore she'd known they were on their way. Which
meant she and Baris had some way of keeping in contact without
the man making it obvious. He'd better find out what
that was. It could be inconvenient at the least to have them
exchanging information if he wanted them isolated. At the most it
could be lethal. The shivering quietened as the power curve
leveled off. Gravity dropped to what felt like a quarter
of standard and Cregar flicked the shockweb harness free again.
He stood and wandered from the cabin. Time for a quick snoop now
under the guise of finding his way about. He had time for that and
more over the time it took to make Arzor. Baris tried to entice
him into gambling and failed. Ideena tried her wiles and he
allowed it to appear she had succeeded. Not that she'd take it
further than sweet smiles. Baris wouldn't like it. But he
allowed it to seem that he was softening toward her, perhaps that
he was beginning to even trust her a little. He wondered who was
fooling who. But you had to play the game. They landed on Arzor. Hiring
a copter and a few career criminals was easy. Baris had the
transactions completed by evening. They'd fly out early the next
morning. Cregar went to his cabin for a good night's sleep.
Judging by the sounds, Baris and Ideena had sought her cabin for
a similarly early night, although not to sleep. That was another
interesting point. Courting danger clearly excited them. His
smile was grim as he made his own preparations. If they tried
anything he'd be ready for it and the danger would be more than
they were expecting. The copter was already there
by the time they had risen and eaten a light meal the next
morning. The hired quartet of scruffy, dangerous-looking port
scum were lounging about beside it. Baris was a qualified pilot,
but at a pinch Cregar could get the copter up if he had to. He
took the seat behind Baris and unobtrusively watched as the big
man handled the controls. The copter circled, drifted
in as quietly as possible from an unexpected direction, and
finally settled in to land in the rough country past the clan
camp. They'd wait until dark then move in. Both Baris and Ideena
had slipped dark lenses into their eyes. They would be able to
see well enough. The lenses Cregar used were state-of-the-art. He
could not only see everything as if it were day, he could also
pick up heat auras. He'd know if living things were in hiding
behind brush or behind anything else which allowed a heat
signature to seep past. He omitted to mention that.
Let them believe his lenses were of the usual kind. If things
went wrong he wasn't about to risk more than he had to. The sun
curved slowly across the lavender sky. The copter's seven
occupants dozed, drank, and ate. Cregar eyed the hired quartet
from under half-closed eyelids. An unsavory bunch. Ten-to-one if
Ideena found her gems in any quantity there'd be an attempt to
dump her, Baris, and Cregar. Probably not until the men had been
paid though. If they waited until they were back at the ship they
could maybe loot the ship too. He lay back, allowing
himself to fall into a half sleep. He could smell the desert from
here where the small breeze lifted to higher land. It was a good
smell. Clean, dry, with a hint of the growing brush. That soft
smoky scent which would have said falwood in bloom to an Azoran.
In the distance a grass hen squawked angrily. Cregar squinted at
his watch. He'd keep an eye on their so-called comrades in crime.
He didn't think they'd try anything. Not yet. They wouldn't move
until there was loot to take. Right now he'd be safe
enough. When he woke completely the
sun was almost down. It would take them a couple of hours to walk
the distance to the clan camp. Best they had a meal now, then
started. Ideena was of the same mind. Once they'd begun the march
she ranged up alongside Cregar and her voice came in a low tone
none but he could hear. "I don't trust these men."
That was the pot calling the kettle black, Cregar thought. He
cocked an eyebrow in invitation for her to continue and she did,
dropping her voice still lower. "I've a spare gun tucked in the
clump of weeds by the ramp. If anything happens, pretend to fall
down there." "What sort of gun? How
effective will it be?" He wanted to know how far she'd
go. "Stunner but it's blast-bolt
activated." That told him. She'd go all the way. Activating a
stunner with a blast-bolt had been done before, but it was so
frowned on that anyone caught doing it would go to rehab
automatically. Of course, if it was his life, then he'd risk the
illegality first and worry about rehab later. It wasn't likely
they'd catch him anyhow. Or care greatly about the death of any
of this lot. But it told him more than he'd known about this
precious pair. He'd always thought they were small-time. They
might still be the jackals he'd believed. If they were prepared
to go that far though, they were rabid ones. He spoke
quietly. "What about your own
stunners here?" "They're
straight." That was better—if it was the truth but he
couldn't be sure of that until they used their weapons. He
plodded on in silence considering all he'd learned of them thus
far. He couldn't trust any of the six people with him and he
didn't like that. He'd have liked things even less if he'd known
what lay ahead. Tani had returned to the
clan. Storm had accepted that when, after ten days, there'd been
no sign of trouble. But it was the time between the two major
seasons on Arzor, the big wet and the big dry. She enjoyed that
pleasantly mild in-between season and had gone back to hunt with
her friends another few days. They'd taken two yearling merin
deer and a number of the fat grass hens. It was an hour short of
dusk. They'd done well enough, now they'd head for the camp to be
back before dark. Jumps High, the first clan
friend she had made the year before, had been about to pack the
meat onto their horses when Ferarre's ears pricked. He whined.
Linking, Tani caught the up and down beat of a muffled copter.
She hissed and dropped flat. Jumps High copied that as did the
other four natives. He half turned from his
sprawl to hand-sign to her. "Danger, where, what?" "Ferarre hears a copter.
That's not good." "How so?" "It didn't head for the
camp, instead it's gone in a half circle around and landed
beyond. It hasn't lifted off again. You know the law, no copter
is allowed over clan lands. I think those who fly it may be
enemies." It had to be that. Or some idiot citizen with more
money than sense but the rangers would have known and stopped it.
The treaty was very firm on over-flights. If it had been Storm or one
of the rangers with an emergency he'd have flown straight to the
camp. The Nitra weren't fools. They would have understood if it
was truly needful. But the copter had landed in cover; not near
the camp. She felt there was danger and these were her friends,
she would not have them hurt because she did not make her warning
clear. Jumps High was signing.
"Does the copter rise again?" "No." The coyote's ears
could hear no sound. The engines were still off. That probably
meant it would stay where it was for a while. She stood, turning,
listening. Then her hands rose. "The engine sounds came from that
way." Her friends clustered around
their mounts, swiftly field dressing the dead deer then loading
the kill. Jumps High considered. "How far are the copter sounds
from here, and how far from our camp?" "From here maybe a half-hour
ride. From camp they may be one hour's ride." And that was what
had given the copter away. They'd circled in from the far side of
the outer lands. It was their ill fortune that Tani and her
friends had been hunting in that direction. Worse luck that
Ferarre and Minou could hear even a copter with a muffled engine
at that distance. Had it not been for the coyotes, even then the
copter would not have been noticed. She smiled to herself.
They'd all been under cover cleaning the game when the copter
circled. If it had heat-sensing gear the occupants hadn't been
reading it at the time. And neither Tani, the Nitra, nor their
animals had been out in the open to be seen by any glancing out
of the clearplas bubble. A copter's heat-sensing gear differed.
It was possible theirs was of the basic kind which read only that
there was a sort of blotch of heat in a certain position. Not the
shape of that source. In which case with everyone in cover they
could have seen the sources and still mistakenly assumed them to
be animals, sheltering from the hotter sun of
afternoon. The deer and grass hens
safely loaded, Jumps High was signaling to Tani again, using her
native name. "We will go now, Sunrise. Once we are back in camp I
will speak to the Thunder-talker of this. She will pray and ask
the powers of the Thunder what is the danger to us. Then we can
make plans. For now, let us ride quickly for the
camp." His mount leapt away and
Tani swung into her saddle. Destiny, the silver part-duocorn
filly she rode, followed Jumps High's mount eagerly. Behind them
in a scattered group came their friends. The coyotes ranged
ahead. Tani wondered if she should mind-link with Mandy. The big
paraowl could fly out and look over the area where the copter had
landed. But if anyone who knew Arzor saw her they'd know she
didn't belong here. It could warn the enemy if that's what they
were. Best to take no chances. Not yet. One thing the possible enemy
should not know. Tani smiled, a slow hard grin. She was the only
human clan-friend among the dozen clans of the Nitra. Because of
her position Kelson of the rangers had granted her a miniature
comcaller. When she visited the Djimbut clan it came with her by
clan permission. Using it she could report any Nitra problems,
anything likely to make trouble between native and settler. There
was a built-in scramble as well; that way if the news was bad no
one listening in would raise a premature alarm. She nudged
Destiny and the filly sped up to canter lightly beside the mount
of Jumps High. "When we come to the camp
I'll speak to Kelson. Ask why a copter breaks the
treaty." "That is good," was the
brief reply. Tani rode on, her mind busy.
She had to know what to say to the ranger head. She sorted her
impressions, ordered them by importance, then rode patiently. As
soon as they arrived at the camp she slowed but continued through
toward the tent of the clan medicine woman. Once there she
dismounted, signing swiftly as her friend stepped from the tent
entrance to greet her. "There may be trouble, I
must speak to Kelson. Listen to what I say." She switched on the
comcaller and reached Kelson almost at once. As she spoke into
the transmitter panel her hands flew, repeating in sign-talk for
the benefit of those clan members who did not understand the
settler language what she was saying to the ranger
head. "Kelson. Listen. While I was
hunting to the north of the clan camp Ferarre heard a copter. It
landed about an hour's ride from the camp and hadn't taken off
again after an hour or so. I don't like the way the engines are
muffled and it circled supposedly out of our hearing before
setting down. Could it be a legitimate flight?" There was a gasp,
then the sound of a computer beeping. After several minutes the
ranger's voice came back, loud and angry. "No, it is not. There's no
record of any request. Our two copters are both out in other
directions and I've just checked with port. No copter filed any
flight plan even remotely in your direction." "You're sure? Then what do
we do?" "Hang on. I'm checking." He
came back after several minutes. "I don't like this, Tani. The
only copter it could be is one belonging to an outfit I don't
trust very far. The copter has muffled engines and the pilot
filed a flight plan toward the desert fringe on a sight-seeing
trip with tourists. My contact at the port says seven people
boarded. He knows two of them from the port here as minor but
unsavory criminals." He paused. "It should be just about dark
where you are by now." "It is," Tani informed
him. "I can't get our copters
back until morning. Tell the clan these people have no rights. If
the warriors protect the clan in any way they must, then they are
within our laws as well as their own." He paused again then spoke
with heavy significance. "In any way. But do your best to see
those ways don't include the tourists, who may be an innocent
cover." "And if they
aren't?" "Then that applies to them
as well." Her flying fingers had been
keeping up with the conversation as Tani and Kelson spoke. From
the growing Nitra circle about her there came soft hisses of
satisfaction. If their actions were within settler law as well as
their own, that meant that stunners taken were legitimate loot.
They could be kept as could anything else taken from the
attackers. The Nitra would have no use for the copter, but if
they took that they could exchange its price for clan wealth in
horses. Tani could guess at their reaction to that
idea. "I think you've said the
right thing, Kelson." "Tell them live tourists can
be fined and the fine given to the clan as well, but only if the
tourists are in one piece," he suggested. "I'll do that. But you see
what you can find out about them. I'll switch the com alarm off.
Better our possible enemy doesn't know we have one. It'll flicker
the lights if you call. The Thunder-talker's interpreter will
stay with it; he's crippled so he isn't a warrior. If there's no
attack going on when you call he can whistle me in to answer.
Tani out." She settled in to discuss
tactics. The coyotes would eat and drink now then slip into the
night. They'd show to heat sensors but as smaller blotches only,
not as what they were. With fortune the enemy would assume them
to be native animals disturbed by the movement. Jumps High had
called in the camp's younger warriors as well. Thrown out in a
screen, they would let the attackers through then close in
behind. The experienced fighters would be ready, defending the
camp and filling in the other half of a surrounding circle of
death. The horse herd was loosed to wander about. The more heat
blotches the better. The Nitra medicine woman was
signing, "What weapons will they have?" "They'll have stunners for
sure, those are legal and everyone has them. If they really mean
this as an attack they could have pulse rifles." She grinned
again as the listening warriors hissed in delight. They knew
weaponry. A pulse rifle was normally beyond their ability to buy,
but if the enemy brought the rifle here it was legitimate loot.
Her hands flashed signs as she continued. "They may have special
things for their eyes. Lenses that allow them to see in the night
as if it was the day." The Nitra medicine woman
gave a bark of amusement. "Hough! Djimbut are warriors. We can
fight in dark or light, do they think we do not know our own
lands? These enemies are fools if they think that way. Already we
know they are here while they do not know we know. Kelson says
their landing is not lawful. They are our prey and their property
shall be ours." Tani signed swiftly then. She must make them
understand that it would be bad if the possibly innocent tourists
died. The Thunder-drummer nodded,
the human gesture of agreement the Arzoran natives had learned
from the settlers. "We understand. It is simple, those without
guns we do not harm, those with guns we shall kill. If your
tourists fight against us, they too shall die." It was a reasonable
attitude, Tani thought, and Kelson could hardly expect the clan
warriors to let themselves be shot, whether the shooter was a
panicked tourist or not. She glanced from the tent entrance. By
now it was about an hour after full dark. The clans tended to
sleep about the second hour unless some celebration was
occurring. Those in the copter would likely know that. She turned
to the com. "Kelson?" "Kelson
listening." "I think if they come it'll
be in about an hour. The clan's agreed not to hurt the tourists
unless they're using weapons too. Then all bets are off. Did you
find out anything more?" His voice was harsh now.
"Much more! The copter was supposed to be taking three tourists
from an out-systems ship on a two-day tour, with one of the
tourists acting as their pilot. The whole things's an
orchestrated litany of lies. I checked the ship register.
Nothing. But a friend in the patrol pulled a scan of the ship's
registration and it's fake. So are the registered IDs of the two
owners. She can't be sure who they really are but she'll keep
trying to find out. She's found nothing on their so-called
passenger as yet, but birds of a feather flock together." He
heard her soft gasp. "No time to talk that over.
Listen. One of the port people says there were seven in the
copter. That leaves four of ours. Two we knew about as soon as
security saw their recorded faces, and port recording has ID'd
the other two tentatively. All four are criminals. Never been
sufficiently nailed to be forced into rehab but the peacekeepers
say they're sure there's a lot of crime the four have been
responsible for, it just hasn't been proven against them. All
four are nasty pieces of work." Tani had been thinking
quickly, aided by the fast-moving hands of her friend, the
Thunder-talker. "Kelson, would any of the four have ridden herd;
are they used to outlands or are they city folk?" There was a chuckle. "Well
asked. Nope, they're all from the city." Her hands relayed that.
Jumps High twittered a couple of swift orders in his own tongue
and two of the warriors vanished. "I doubt they know much about
local terrain and so far as I know none ride. They can't have
more than stunners and just possibly a selective needier,
either," Kelson assured her. "Certain of
that?" "Fortunately. The port
periphery sensors just put in a new weapons system. It lets us
know if anyone crosses the port boundary carrying heavier weapons
such as pulse rifles or blasters. It doesn't alert the carrier,
just the peacekeepers. They can check them out without the one
who's caught knowing how he came to be tagged. So, there were
only stunners for certain when this bunch lifted from port, but
there was a slightly different reading which could indicate a
needier, one of the small handheld type." She seized on the loophole.
"But they could have landed and picked up other weapons after
leaving." "I don't think so. I timed
your message, added the time they left here, and there's no gap.
At steady speed they'd have just been landing when you heard
them. We do think the copter may have basic heat sensors. Those
would only give them a rather blurred heat signature and the
rough size of the target. I'll get rangers to you at dawn.
Where's Logan?" Tani sighed. "At High Peaks
with Hosteen's team. Logan twisted his wrist and ankle handling a
frawn. Hosteen's riding circuit alone around our ranch. He's got
Baku with him but Surra's still bonding with her new mate, and
Hing has babies." "Then neither man's going to
be available. Okay, Tani. I'll have reinforcements in by dawn.
I'd like some of these idiots to be alive when I get there but if
it's you or them, let it be them. Kelson out." From the darkness outside
the tent came a twittering. The interpreter signed at flowing
speed and fluency. "They come. Jumps High has put up the bodies
of the merin deer on stakes as though they lived. Our scouts
waited in line behind them. Our enemy sees beasts only. They see
in the dark as you have said. They circled the deer so as not to
alarm them." He stopped to listen as the cry of a night bird
came. "The enemy approach. They are close to the horse herd." He
gave a thin-lipped smirk. "They see in the dark, yes.
But still they do not know what they see. Within the herd other
warriors wait and are overlooked." The Thunder-talker nodded.
"Go now, make ready. Sunrise, walk wary." Tani smiled at her. "Very
wary," she agreed. "You also, wise one." She trotted silently
from the tent and went to ground in a small hollow at the far
edge of the camp. The chill ground would shield part of her heat
signature. With only her head showing she'd look like a
rock-rabbit to any heat sensors. The small plump creatures tended
to be about in the early hours of the day or during the night,
their thick fur shielding them from any chill. At the edge of the camp
Baris halted his troops. "The whole place is asleep. Ideena, you
and Cregar go to that big tent, grab all the jewels you can.
Stun-spray every tent you pass. You other four, stunners on wide
spray. Don't worry, we have additional power units. Walk in line
and overlap stun beams in front of us in a semicircle. Make no
noise." They obeyed, setting their
stunners. At his word they started forward, stunners weaving in a
pattern which should cover and overlap every living thing in
front of them in a wide area. Unprepared for this tactic, the
Nitra in the vanguard fell silently in their cover and without
the attackers even knowing of their presence. Moving in skilled
quiet, Ideena and Cregar had circled just outside the stun
influence toward the shaman's tent. They sprayed it
and entered. Ideena took one look and swore viciously in a low
monotonous voice. "No one here but a
Ghesh-damned comcaller." She touched the panel. "Warm, someone
was using it only a few minutes ago. Had to be that girl. Look
through the gear here. If they cleared out fast they may have
left the cat's-eyes behind." She began raking through the
Thunder-talker's possessions ignoring a commotion which flared up
in the distance. "Do you really want to waste
time?" Cregar snapped. "The rangers could be on their way right
now." Ideena glared. "No, they
couldn't. We paid high for the infocheck. Their copters are on
the far side of the area. Even if they were warned just now they
couldn't get here in time. But we may have to get back
into the port a different way. Move it, Cregar. Check that box!"
She gave a subdued cry of pleasure as several bracelets tumbled
out of the folded cloth. She snatched up the jewelry, crooning at
the play of light over green and sparkling white, before wrapping
them again and thrusting them into her pocket. "Worth a whole packet of
credits. Any more?" "No sign." Her mouth turned angrily
down. "You promised a lot more than these." "The wretched woman is
probably wearing the rest. Get out and look for her if you want
them," Cregar growled. It wasn't likely Ideena would find anyone.
But it would get her off his back. She scowled and vanished
through the entrance only to leap back again. "What..." "Don't talk. Get out the
back under the edge. Fast. We've got company." Cregar was no fool. He dived
for the edge of the tent, levered a peg out, and crawled through
the gap. Ideena followed and he turned to re-peg the edge. As he
did so a heavy blow to his back spun him partly around. Ideena
stunned the warrior who had appeared, then looked down at
Cregar. "I thought you were supposed
to be good, Circus Man?" "I'm alive aren't I?" Cregar
shook himself as he rose to his feet glancing at the heavy
fighting spear which had struck him at close range. He owed Laris
one for that, if it hadn't been for her warning he'd have been
wearing lighter body armor under his shirt. The spear would have
gone through the lighter level of that. He took the lead again,
drifting through cover to wait and look back once they were
clear. Two of their men were down, dead he thought. The third had
been struck down and was being tied even as they watched. There
was no sign of the fourth. Baris had hung back cautiously behind
his small command. Seeing that he apparently used no weapon, the
Nitra had ignored him. Baris put two and two
together when he was ignored and fled as if in a blind panic.
Ideena and Cregar came up with him two miles out of the clan
camp. "What do we do
now?" "We get to the copter and
come back." Ideena was white with fury. "I'll show them they
don't beat me so easily." She smiled nastily. "There's a
wide-spray heavy-duty stun on the copter. We brought it aboard in
that chest Baris carried. We'll lift, come in at about fifty
feet, and spray everything for a mile around the camp. Now,
run." They trotted through the
brush and over rough ground until Ideena was stumbling and even
Cregar was wearying. They reached the copter, Baris leaped to the
pilot's seat and waited, speaking softly. "Get your breath first. Give
them time back there to calm down. Did anyone see what happened
to the others? I know some crazy horse killed one. He walked into
it around a bush and it jumped him." "Three dead then," Cregar
said. "They've got the other one and he'll talk if they keep him
alive." "So we clean him. Leave him
with the others. They'll identify them in time but nobody'll know
anything. If we reach the port before daylight we can get to the
ship and clear before they can stop us." Ideena looked mutinous. "Not
without my gems." "Not without my beasts
either," Cregar added. "Okay, okay. Here, take a
drink and then we'll go." Baris passed over a flask and both
drank. The Fever brandy burned a track clear to their livers and
both gasped at the rush of heat. Ideena nodded. "All right. I'm ready. Go,
Go!" Baris lifted the machine
into the air on steady engines, swung it around, and pointed it
south to the camp. The return engagement was about to begin. This
time... Chapter Nine Again the coyotes were the
first to hear the copter returning. It couldn't be Kelson. He'd
said they couldn't get to her until dawn. It had to be the enemy
coming back. Tani stared up at the sky. From the sounds heard by
Minou and Ferarre the machine was coming in barely off the
ground. That was the action of a peacekeeper machine about to
stun-spray. These people must have one of those harmless
pacifiers. But why, what did they want?
She was standing in the entrance of the Thunder-talker's tent
with the older woman. They'd been replacing the tumbled clothing.
Tani stood motionless, her mind suddenly racing. The enemy had
been here. They'd searched among clothing and taken—what? Her hands flashed into
life. "Elder sister! Those who
came, they took what?" "My bracelets." "Those of the
Thunder-talker's power?" "Not so. Friends gifted me
these. But Thunder-talker gems. I mourn their loss." Tani put two and two
together in one intuitive leap. "I think two of our enemies have
banded together. Some come to steal the cat's-eyes. The others
come to take my spirit-friends." She reached for the coyotes and
Mandy the paraowl, urging the paraowl to be ready, the coyotes to
go with the Thunder-talker. Then she turned back to the medicine
woman. "My spirit-friends hear them coming back again. Take off
your gems of power, hide them well outside somewhere. Quick, be
quick!" She called Mandy as the
Thunder-talker swiftly stripped herself of the gemmed belt, the
necklace, and items of her calling. The paraowl arrived just as
the Nitra medicine woman vanished into the dark to hide her
sacred jewelry. Mandy landed lightly and waddled forward as Tani
dropped to one knee to stroke the large bird. "Take this message to Brad,"
she told her friend, impressing it with both voice and mind.
"Brad, I'm with Djimbut clan. We have been attacked and they are
returning. Thieves after cat's-eyes and possibly my team. Tell
Kelson to close the port." By now she could hear the copter
almost at the camp fringe. "Mandy, fly fast. Copter enemy.
Fly!" Mandy was into the air as
the last word left Tani's lips. She lined out and fled for the
home ranch like an arrow. But quick as the paraowl was, the
copter had been quicker. The stun-spray was wide-set and the edge
of it clipped the fleeing bird. Only lightly but enough that she
went into a temporarily blacked-out tumble. Her wings extended,
she planed to a soggy landing in brush several miles from the
clan camp. She struck lightly enough but one wing hit a branch
within the scrub. Feathers bent, then broke.
It was a painless but exasperating injury. It would unbalance her
flight. Mandy crouched, dazed, in the bushes, panting. Her head
drooped as the light stun took effect. She slept, safe at least
from those who would have stolen her, but her message
undelivered. In the clan camp all was
quiet. Nothing moved but the breeze twitching the clothing of
those who lay about within its confines. The copter landed. Three
humans emerged to begin raking through the camp. Cregar caught
hold of Ideena before she could get far. "People first. Where's that
man they took alive?" Baris was checking limp
bodies. "He's here, badly injured but he's still alive." He
borrowed a knife from the nearest recumbent Nitra and slashed
once. "Now he isn't." "That wasn't necessary."
Cregar didn't care about the man's death, but if he was ever
deep-probed by some authority he wanted to be able to say he'd
protested. Ideena snorted. "Save it. We
don't have to carry the weight back, and we don't have to pay
him. The natives killed the other three, we just say they got him
too. Maybe this one will even believe it." She took the knife
from Baris, wiped the handle, and pressed it several times at a
number of angles into the Nitra's hand. Then she allowed the
knife to drop as if fallen when his body relaxed,
stunned. "Let them find that. Now,
stop worrying and start looking for my cat's-eyes." They found
cat's-eyes enough, but of the commoner type. Red, gold, and the
occasional black. But of the many times more valuable green or
white used only for ceremony or gifts to a Thunder-talker, they
found nothing. Ideena cursed steadily as she hunted. Baris called from where he
too searched. "I think this is their witch woman. But she isn't
wearing any gems." Ideena came running. "Check
her." "I have.
Nothing." "Look around her. She may
have taken them off and hidden them when she heard us coming
back. She'd have only heard that a minute before. Barely enough
time to get them off, alone hide them away." Baris grunted. "I still
can't find anything." He nudged the stunned woman with his foot.
"Pity we can't take the cow with us. I'd see she
talked." Cregar intervened. "We don't
have time to waste. Pick up anything you want and help me with
this pair." He'd discovered the coyotes where they lay in small
heaps near Tani. The girl too had wisely stripped her cat's-eye
jewelry, gifts of the tribe, and hidden it in a hastily scooped
hole just by the tent rim. In the black and white of dark-lenses
the minor earth disturbance should pass unnoticed. It had. But
Minou and Ferarre had leaped back to be with their friend as the
stuns struck. Now they lay where Cregar could find
them. His voice came harsher.
"Pick up the Ghesh-damned beasts and get back in the copter.
We're going on to that mountain ranch." Ideena turned angrily.
"What? That wasn't agreed." "You want the credits I can
release to your account, you'll do it. Get going." She nodded slowly. "Baris,
fire up the engines. It seems we have one more stop." The limp coyotes were
loaded. The engines sounded their muffled beat, and the machine
lifted, swung to the north, and was gone. Below in the camp,
nothing moved. Not for many hours. But in the air the copter was
traveling at full speed and so was Ideena's tongue. "What are we supposed to do?
Where is this ranch? What are we after there, is there likely to
be anything worth having?" Cregar waved her to silence.
"Baris, head north seventy degrees by west five. You'll see
lights at a hundred and fifty miles. Stun-spray the whole ranch
as we come in. We drop straight down, grab what I want, and lift
again immediately. If you can find anything worth having in that
time, do it. If not you'll have to leave it behind. First
priority is the beasts I indicate. As soon as we're back in the
air head for the port with all the speed you can get out of this
thing." "And land where?" Cregar's smile was hard. "On
the port perimeter to the east near the cargo area. I have it all
arranged." He saw Baris and Ideena
exchange glances. That would hold them. They knew what kind of an
ant's nest they could have kicked over here and they weren't keen
to walk into peacekeepers. If he had a safe way into the ship
they'd hold off. They could always take him once they were
safe—or so they believed. He saw their
bodies relax and hid an unpleasant look. They were effective,
this pair. But incurably small-time and a little too independent.
The guild would never suggest they joined it. He suppressed a
bitter smile. He was just as independent. He'd simply hidden it
better and the guild needed his skills. The abilities this pair
had were a cred a score. The copter droned on until
Baris spoke. "Lights coming up below." Cregar checked the
instruments. "That has to be the Quade ranch. Swing low across it
and stun-spray. Then go back and do the same at right angles. It
should cover any of them out in the other buildings
too." Ideena nodded. "Once we
land, Baris, you stay in the copter. Keep the engines ticking
over and watch out for anyone coming in from elsewhere. Be ready
to lift off as soon as I say." The machine was swinging
through the second line of stun as he nodded in turn. "All done.
Get moving..." The copter dropped like a
stone, landed lightly, and the doors slid open. Cregar vaulted
out. The door of the ranch opened to his thrust and he darted
inside. When the copter swung down Logan had been in the
basement. At the start of the Xik troubles his father had lined
that with proplas—an application of plascrete and
clearplas. Specially treated, it was impervious to stunner and
blaster, and if the house collapsed on top, it would hold those
within safely. Logan heard the engines
above and headed for the stairs, dropping the basement trapdoor
shut behind him. He emerged into the corridor with Surra snarling
beside him just as Cregar entered. Behind him Ideena produced a
selective needier taken from one of the dead men, and shot in
panic; the beast looked like death incarnate as it charged and
Ideena had no plans to die here. Surra dropped, blood pouring
from a gaping wound across the top of her skull. Logan shouted in
anger and kept coming, his hand lashing across to reach his
knife. Her adrenaline pumping now, Ideena shot again and Logan
fell. Cregar bit back his fury at the possible loss of the
dune-cat. It was done and there was no time to fight about
it. He stunned Surra to be safe
then snapped at Baris who had followed them in when he heard the
needier discharge. "Pick the cat up and get her into the back of
the copter. Seal the wound off. If she bleeds to death I'll
deduct half the cred. Move it!" He saw the big cat safely
stowed and returned to search quickly through the house. In the
main family room he found a stunned meercat curled about a
newborn litter. He grabbed the babies and mother and leaped for
the copter again. He dumped the box of meercats carefully, then
returned to look through the house. Somewhere there was an eagle.
He wasn't sure if he wanted to find that or not. But for his own
pride he had to know he'd looked. After that he found the safe.
It was impossible to open in the time he had but there were a
number of small items of value about the room. He returned to the
copter with filled pockets. "Where's Ideena?" "Looting, of course," Baris
drawled. "Rev the
engines." "That'll bring her." He
obeyed and the woman came running, her arms full of small
plunder. Baris shifted a hand, the engines rose a note, and the
copter lifted. Ideena took her seat and strapped in as the
machine fled low and fast for the port. "I found a few good things.
Makes up for that jewelry we couldn't find on the native." She
displayed her loot and Baris grunted approval. Cregar leaned
forward and selected a ring from the pile. It was from old Earth,
Cregar thought. Silver, with a flawed grass-green garnet as the
stone. Some skilled gemstone-carver had etched that with the head
of a cat in three-quarter profile. It seemed to look sideways at
him. "I'll take this. It isn't
worth much and I know someone who'd like it." He saw their
sneers. They thought him enamored of some woman. Nor did they
recognize the work as Terran. They saw only the flawed stone. He
smiled into the dark. Laris would be delighted by the cat's-head
ring. He'd give it to her as recompense for his return and the
loss of his stashed credits—and for her warning which had
saved him a spear in the back. He'd have to tell her not to wear
it if they ever returned to Arzor though. He dropped the ring
into his pocket and sat back. The copter raced the
daylight as it hurtled across country. It beat the sun by a
narrow margin. Dawn was showing dimly as it set down quietly
behind the largest cargo shed. Cregar was first out. He peered
about. A man approached and hissed softly. "One is sent." "One is found." "Good. Dump whatever you
have into these." Two men wheeled in large covered pallets and
the raiders got busy. Surra went in, her bleeding stopped
although Cregar didn't like the way she breathed. Dedran would be
furious if another beast died. After that they loaded the
uninjured but still stunned coyotes and meercats. That haul was
good enough to temper rage. The meercat female would stay alive
to care for her babies, and the babies wouldn't care where they
were so long as they had their mother. What was more, the babies
wouldn't be even loosely bonded to anyone as yet; he'd claim a
pair for himself before any other person reached for
them. The man was nervously
tossing them port coveralls. "Here, quick, put these on over your
gear. Push the pallets up to your ship. Will it unlock as you get
there?" Baris nodded. "I can voice
trigger it when we're close. It'll drop the ramp on
command." "Good. Take the pallets and
coveralls with you. No time to leave them." He was checking the
chrono on his wrist. "Go that way," he pointed. "Behind the shed
and around from the other side. It puts you closest to your ship
without being seen until you leave cover. Security will scan
anytime now. You go the minute I say. You have one hundred fifty
seconds to reach the ship before they see you moving. On my
mark—" He held his hand across their
path. Then, "Go!" With Cregar in the lead
pushing one pallet, Baris right behind him shoving the other,
Ideena racing up to pass both men, they made for the ship. In his
head Cregar was ticking off the time. Fifty seconds, a hundred.
Baris called a hoarse order and the ramp began to lower. One
hundred fifty seconds and from behind them a Klaxon howled.
Ideena slowed to scoop up a stunner from the weeds. The ramp hit
the dust and Ideena was first up, running for the bridge. Baris
shouted an order as he and Cregar thrust the pallets up the
ramp. The ramp began to close
behind them and the ship shivered into life as engines obeyed the
final order. Beside him Cregar heard a clang as someone shot at
the closing ramp. It snapped shut obliviously. He grabbed for
ties. They'd have to up-ship right now. No time to sort out the
beasts. Just hope they could lift before any heavier port
security came into play. There certainly appeared to be a lot of
activity in the main building. He could see lights coming on all
over the place. Someone was shouting at them
with a loudspeaker. Someone else had fired up a laser cutter on a
crawler heading toward the ship. He could see the ruby winking as
it lit. Baris and Ideena weren't listening. They'd flung
themselves into seats on the bridge, the engines were screaming,
and even as Cregar threw himself flat the ship howled upward.
Baris must be pulling five gravities, he thought dizzily. But at
least he could think. They hadn't been shot down yet. He hoped
the big cat would survive such a liftoff. The ship cleaved sky,
higher, higher. A vanishing silver splinter until it was gone.
Below the port manager was resolving to make some very stringent
inquiries. Her security shouldn't have been that slow. Whoever
that bunch had been they'd had help from some at Arzor Port.
She'd find whoever they were and make them sorry. The port was
autonomous, but for an insult like that she'd work with the
peacekeepers. Even the patrol. No one raped her port and
walked away laughing. On the High Peaks ranch
Logan was drifting into consciousness. He hurt. He crawled
bleeding from room to room unable to accept what had happened.
Surra was gone, taken. So too were Hing and her babies. What was
he going to tell Storm? He heard hoofbeats outside just as he
slipped into darkness again. In the Djimbut clan camp
Tani stood shakily. She reeled toward the comcaller and gasped
out a message. Then she sat limply waiting for her strength to
return a little and her stun-headache to abate. The
Thunder-talker joined her. They sat in silence, both outraged,
both determined. This insult would be avenged. Neither as yet had
realized that the coyotes had gone. In the basin, Brad Quade
finished breakfast and answered a call. He blew out a mouthful of
swankee as he heard, dropped the cup, and ran for the door.
Moments later his crawler left a plume of dust along the road
toward the port. He drove with a reckless disregard for the road
or his own safety. Kelson's copter came in overhead and settled
on the first suitable spot. Brad's vehicle raced up. "Talk fast, Kelson. What's
going on?" "You've been raided. I'm on
the way to the Djimbut camp. Tani called from there. She says
some copter came in during the night, attacked the Nitra. Stunned
everyone, stole her coyotes, as much cat's-eye jewelry as they
could find, and left again." Brad opened his mouth and was waved
to silence. "That's not all. The clan
got four of the raider's men. I want to go there first and see if
we can ID any of the bodies. They went on to hit your place at
High Peaks. Storm commed in. He got back after line-riding to
find Logan hurt bad; Surra and some of the meercats are missing."
Brad sat. Then he spoke quietly. "There's more, isn't
there?" "Yup, we lost the damn
raiders too. Somehow they got back into the port and managed to
up-ship. Port manager's going crazy. She swears they didn't do
that without someone helping them and she's going to bring in the
peacekeepers." Kelson eyed the big rancher. "Keep it together,
Brad. Logan will be okay. Tani isn't hurt. We'll find out who it
was and get the animals back." "This ties in with those
other reports." "Seems likely. I have one of
my men alerting other planet ports. We may pick them up
elsewhere. The city security knows too." He grinned wryly. "I
gather they aren't any happier about this than the port manager.
Their officer here has made an offer to the port manager to bring
in a deep probe and operator. Last I heard she was thinking about
it. That's how serious she's taking everything." "Guada's First-ship family
too," Brad said absently. "Our families have been friends since
then. I'd do the same for her." He lapsed into brooding silence
again as the copter hurtled on. It all fit together somehow.
The dead beast masters, the missing beasts. The way in which the
raiders had been able to arrive unnoticed and lift off again
despite a closed port. They'd had a copter, he remembered. And
left four men dead in the clan camp. Those would be places to
start. With his teeth in the beginnings of a solution he'd not
let go. A small deadly smile quirked his mouth. Nor would his
kin. Storm was a trained fighter,
a beast master who'd fought the Xiks across a dozen worlds. Tani,
small, slender, untrained, was still in many ways Storm's equal.
They'd stood shoulder to shoulder against the enemy before. And
Logan, his wild-blooded son who loved the wilderness more than
civilization. Logan who'd lost his half-brother's beasts and a
fight against the raiders. They were three to take up a war trail
indeed. And that they would do. He had only to find the trail
head for them. That was his work. He set his teeth and willed
calm. He'd be of no use if he allowed his anger to rule. First
let them land at the clan camp and see what they could do to help
there. He leaned forward to touch Kelson on the arm. "The Nitra, they know we're
coming?" "The Thunder-talker has
spoken. We are welcome to land and collect the dead. Tani's
coming back to High Peaks with us. Jumps High and a couple of his
people will lead Tani's mount back to the basin." "Any word of the
paraowl?" "Not when I
left." Brad fell silent again. If
his young daughter-in-law had lost not only her beloved coyote
friends but also Mandy she would be utterly devastated. When the
copter sank to a landing the girl was the first there. She was
leading Djimbut warriors who carried four bodies, one trampled
and hoof-slashed almost beyond recognition as human. Brad
grunted. That would be the work of Destiny, Tani's filly,
three-quarter duo-corn and wholly ferocious to any she deemed a
threat. Tani was everywhere now:
guiding the bodies into the copter cargo hold, finger-talking
rapidly with Jumps High, then the Djimbut medicine woman. Finally
she came to stand looking at Brad. "Asizi." She used the ancient word of
address. "We have none of our own dead. The Nitra will leave
vengeance to us unless we ask. Of what lives were taken none were
theirs, by the Thunder's will." The Thunder-talker moved up to
stand by the girl. She spoke and her interpreter's hands
flickered with quick fluency. "The enemy would have taken
the gems which mark my power. But for the quick thinking of my
younger sister all would have been lost. Her spirit-friends twice
heard the enemy and twice that aided us to be ready. The clan
stands with their clan-friend. If there be anything in which we
can aid in return, let it be known." Kelson gave the bow over
linked spread hands which was the Nitra acknowledgment in all
formality of the Thunder-talker's power. Then he lifted them to
sign. "Gratitude. The enemy evil
ones were ours. To ours the law which judges. Our clan is greatly
angered, we ride in war. Yet if there is need, be sure we shall
ask." She made the small
cupped-hand gesture of acceptance and turned away. From where
Tani stood, there came a loud cry and the girl was running. Both
Brad and Kelson jumped from the machine to follow. They reached
her as she halted, half laughing, half crying. "Mandy. She's all right."
From the brush along the camp edge stumped a weary, still almost
flightless paraowl. She had flown where she could, walked where
she must, and Mandy had not appreciated the walking part of the
journey. Tani dropped linked arms to make a bridge and the tired
bird clambered up to sit on a padded shoulder. There she rested,
drawing her beak gently down Tani's cheek and crooning softly as
she sent a series of pictures. Tani examined the indicated wing
and sighed before turning to the men. "I sent her to take you a
message, Brad. The copter came in faster and spray-stunned
farther out than I expected. The stunner fringe caught Mandy as
she flew, and knocked her silly. She landed several miles away
without breaking more than some of the flight feathers in one
wing. So she couldn't fly more than a few yards at one time.
She's been flying and walking back here ever since." Mandy made a disgusted
spitting sound and there was laughter. Kelson had been
translating Tani's words into sign-talk as she went. Even Nitra
faces broke up in amusement at Mandy's obvious disgust at having
to walk. "She has very good hearing
though. The copter came back very low still past her and she
heard a few words. Say them for us, Mandy." The ferocious beak
opened and an incongruous voice sounded. It was female, the
accent was inner-systems and over-cultured. "...men. Oh, all right... go
to this place. But there'd better be something there worth having
besides those stupid animals. Your boss won't thank you for more
of them dead either..." Mandy stopped and waited for the generous
praise she promptly received. Kelson looked at them. "That
might be useful. We can't run a voice scan on an imitation but
it's so good to a human ear I'd bet experts at the school can
tell us which world the woman comes from. Maybe more. Right now,
we'd better head for High Peaks." He waited for Tani to settle
Mandy before leading the way back to the copter and ushering them
inside. He leaned out to sign to Jumps High. "What do you want of
us?" "The bow hands of the
enemies who do this," was the swift reply. "If that cannot be
done, then bring us sure word of their deaths. Bring us a
death-trophy we can hang in the medicine tent." Kelson's hands
moved in acknowledgment of that. Then he slid the door shut and
started the engines. Tani glanced at the paraowl as they lifted.
Mandy's feathers could be fixed as soon as they reached the basin
ranch and had a night's rest. She hoped Logan would be well. Brad
had mentioned only that he'd been hurt. Logan had been more than
merely hurt. Storm, when he came running into the house, had
found his brother lying in a spreading pool of blood. His eyes
opened as Storm knelt by him and he tried to rise. "Lie quiet. I'll get this
bleeding stopped. Think about what you want me to know." He
worked for several minutes before sitting back. "That's well.
Wait now." He turned to slide open the door in a cupboard. Behind
that was a small chilled area with a palm-lock. From it he took
medical items and used them quickly. "Now, talk fast,
brother." Logan looked up. "Raiders.
Copter." He spoke between gasps, his strength fading again. "Took
Surra, Hing, her babies. Surra bad hurt, still alive. One..." his
voice slid into silence before he drew on the last of his
strength. "Woman, Storm. Woman shot me." His eyes shut and his
body went limp in his brother's arms. Storm checked the medkit
frantically. No, all was well. Logan might be long in mending
completely. But he'd survive. He rose, lifting Logan to
carry him to a bed. Then he permitted himself to consider the
words briefly. It was possible. Arzor had rarely suffered pirate
raids. It had little of portable value save for the cat's-eyes,
and for those alone major raiding cost more than it could recoup.
At a glance he'd seen at least two rooms had been looted of small
valuables. They hadn't attempted to open the safe though, as real
pirates would have done. And the raiders had also gone out of
their way to take beast master animals. That argued they were
tied in with the other deaths and abductions. Yet if they wanted the
animals why hadn't they seen by now that it was futile? The
beasts died. Why would they continue? He shook his head. Maybe
this time the raider boss had been lucky. Surra could die, that
was quite likely if she was in their hands and away from Storm
too long. The meercats would probably survive. He hated to think
of small, affectionate Hing and her new babies in cruel or
uncaring hands. She'd never known anything but
affection. There was no time to think
any further of that. He reached for the com. Kelson at the other
end was almost incoherent with haste. No time to talk. He'd be
there with Brad and Tani in two or three hours. Storm should hold
on and wait. He did so but it seemed far longer than the time
promised before he heard the ranger copter slipping in from
overhead. Tani was first out and straight into his
arms. Chapter Ten Storm reached out to hold
Tani protectively. He could feel the shivers which shook her.
This was personal distress, not only a reaction to Logan's hurt
and the abduction of part of Storm's team—fond as she was of her
brother-in-law and of Storm's animals. His gaze met the worried
gaze of his stepfather over her head. Storm's instincts told him
there was something he hadn't heard as yet. "Asizi? What else has happened?" But
Brad was entering the house. He'd see Logan for himself. It was
Kelson who spoke quickly. "The raiders must have come
on to High Peaks. They hit the Djimbut first. No, no one of the
Nitra was badly hurt. But they seem to have had a double agenda
there. They were after cat's-eye gemstones and
beasts." Tani lifted her head. "They
took Minou and Ferarre," she wept. "They stunned Mandy but she
got away from them." Her eyes glowed fury before filling with
pain once more. "We killed four of them but they still got away
with my friends." Until now Storm had not
completely reacted to the loss of Surra and Hing and her babies.
Now that loss filled him. His arms clamped Tani to him and his
head bent over hers. A silent moan of pain tore through him. Tani
felt the echo of his grief. "Storm, what is it, are you
hurt?" "Surra, Hing, and her
babies. They took them as well." He felt her stiffen. She stepped
back. Her face was transformed into an implacable rage. Her hands
came up slowly from her sides, fingers crooked a little. The
anger coming from her was so powerful Storm could feel it against
his mind like heat. He stiffened—there were times when he forgot
that she had lived on Terra during the Xik attacks, lost her
father to the enemy, and seen her mother killed. She'd fled her
world to escape being mind-broken or killed and survived it all.
Under the gentleness of her surface lived a woman who was
descended from one of the greatest female warriors of her people.
Six months earlier when courage was needed, she had not been
found wanting. "Surra, Hing and the babies,
Minou, and Ferarre." Her voice was the long dangerous note of a
warhorn as she roll-called. "We'll find where the raiders went."
She turned on Kelson. "What do we know?" He restrained himself
from stepping back at the intensity of that demand. At the rage
which filled the small slender body. He spoke slowly, wanting to
defuse that flaring fury. "Whoever they were they had
help on Arzor. The port manager swears no one could have breached
security without aid. We're an outer world and security isn't
what it can be on an inner world, but it's good enough. I acted
on Tani's first call. We'd closed the port before they reached
it. So they should have been picked up entering the gates. They
weren't." He remembered manager Gauda's report on that and his
own anger rose. "They got across the
permacrete landing area and entered their ship disguised as cargo
handlers. To do that they had someone's help. The manager was
certain of that much once she'd checked the security tapes. She's
so furious she has accepted a patrol offer. They'll bring in an
operator with a deep probe. She's made that known and thinks it
may..." A series of urgent beeps sounded from the ranger copter.
"Excuse me." He pulled down the hush
cover and talked, listened, talked again. Then he lifted the
cover as a pleased look spread over his weathered
face. "Nice timing. One of the
people involved has talked. It seems likely he's scared of what
else the probe could uncover. He's a small-fry. Not really
involved. Just bribed to leave coveralls and a couple of pallets
in an unusual place and let the raiders know where and how to
dodge the scanner for long enough to get a head start to their
ship. But he knew who bribed him. That's the first mistake. He
wasn't supposed to but he did. The peacekeepers are out picking
up that one now." Storm imagined Surra,
injured, in pain, separated from the human who had walked beside
her so long. She would not bow to others. She was a cat and it
was not in her nature. She would fight them every step of the
way. She would end up dead like the others the raiders had
stolen. But Hing, so happy with her new litter and new mate after
being so long alone. The kidnapers would take the babies as soon
as they were old enough to be weaned. And Hing who needed her
kind about her would be alone once more. The pain of their loss tore
at him. He thrust it down. He would be calm. He would hunt down
the thieves and when he found them they'd talk. He'd have his
team whole again or die in the hunt. He had no idea of the image
he made. Nor how Tani had merged her own fury, then control, with
his. Together they turned to study the ranger. "When are they likely to
have this talker?" "Anytime now, but Storm,
they won't let you talk..." "We'll take Logan down to
the hospital. Then we'll see what happens." Kelson surrendered. "Yes.
Logan is most important right now." They flew back to the city.
Logan was wheeled away. A doctor paused to speak before he too
followed the stretcher. "He'll be fine. Don't worry. Come back in
the morning." Brad hesitated. Storm laid a
hand on his stepfather's shoulder. "Go with Logan. Tani will be
with me. When we're done we'll go to the ranch house. We can hire
a vehicle to return there." "No need. The crawler's at
the edge of the port. I left it there when Kelson collected me.
Use that." Storm nodded and stepped back. Brad headed for the
hospital doors and vanished as Storm turned to eye
Kelson. "Tani and I will go to the
port. I want to talk to Port Manager Gauda there and I may be
able to have a few words with others." "If you mean the man who was
bribed, they won't let you near him. Go back to the ranch. If the
authorities want to talk with you they'll find you." "I'd rather find them.
Wastes less time." His tone was implacable and Kelson threw up
his hands. "Do what you want to. You
will anyhow, the same as Logan usually does." "And that's made him one of
the best rangers you have," Storm returned. "Think about it. This
bunch attacked a Nitra clan camp. They didn't kill anyone, but if
they had the Djimbut clan would have ridden to war. Worse still,
if they'd succeeded in stealing the Thunder-talker's regalia
other Nitra clans would have joined them." He punched the air for
emphasis. "Think. It isn't impossible
even the Norbie clans could have united with them. An affront to
the Thunder or a demand from it is one of the few things that
could unite both the wild and civilized tribes. It did once
before. A dead Nitra warrior or two is one thing. Stealing
objects of power and desecrating them is a lot more." Tani cut in quietly. "You
know the patrol's attitude on settled planets where there's
already a native people. Point out to them that the raiders could
have begun war here. That makes it of patrol interest as well as
ranger business. Causing war between native and human settlers is
an interworld crime. What if the raiders do something like this
elsewhere?" Kelson's face had been
hardening as he listened. He'd thought of the possibilities
himself but had not considered the patrol in this. A year back,
the lethal Xik-bred clickers had driven the wild clans from their
desert lands. The patrol would have forced the human settlers to
evacuate their ranches, then Arzor, rather than see a
settler—native war. He nodded
slowly. "I'll talk to the patrol
office here about this. Tani's right. If she hadn't figured out
that the raiders wanted gems then we could be facing a native
uprising. If the raiders pull something similar elsewhere the
patrol could have a civil war on their hands. And to my mind this
all ties in with what Tani's kin discovered from other worlds.
Someone's trying to collect augmented beasts from beast master
teams." He stood a moment, his face
thoughtful. Even with Terra a burned-out cinder, enough of the
fleet and command structure had survived. A new High Command had
risen which governed the patrol and the reactivated survey
section. Most often now they acted as a clearinghouse for
information and as the arbiters of final decisions. "This could bring in High
Command. It could even be that the raids are another Xik
brew." Storm shook his head. "It
doesn't feel like that." "Maybe not. But do you know
it isn't for sure?" "Of course not." "But if High Command gets
involved you have a lever," Kelson said softly, a grin sliding
over his face. Tani chuckled. "He's got you
there, my love. As a beast master they'd talk to you, get your
opinion. Maybe let you talk to whoever the probe turns up here.
Of course the Xiks could be involved." Her love looked down at her.
"Cunning little warrior, aren't you?" "I learned from the best,"
Tani retorted ambiguously. "Now can we start for the port? Time
is moving on." The ranger turned. "I can
drop you at Brad's crawler. After that I'll talk to the patrol
officer. Her Office is at the port too. Check with me before you
leave for the ranch. If I've heard anything more I can tell you
then." He climbed into the copter and waited until they were
strapped in. Then he lifted for the port. Tani and Storm exited
the machine by the crawler. "Where first?" 'The port manager. We may be
able to tell her a few things. This way." Tani came with him,
their linked arms giving mutual comfort and support. The port manager's office
was a whirl of activity. People came and went, peacekeepers
walked through the milling staff, and now and again they could
hear the manager's voice cutting through the din. Storm forged a
path in and leaned forward, resting his hands on the
desk. "I'm—" "I know who you are." She
raised her voice again. "Everyone out. I want to talk to these
two. Out!" The office cleared, the last man out shutting the door
behind him. Gauda looked them over and grinned, a tired harassed
smile that nevertheless managed to be surprisingly
sweet. "What I want from the pair
of you are times. My man admits he was bribed. He claims it
wasn't done until the raiders had reached the port. I know damn
well he's a liar. The man he's named doesn't know a thing. He's
so furious about the accusation, he did what Hasset never
expected him to do and submitted to probe to prove that. It did.
Now he's with his lawyer and laying a suit for several million
credits on Hasset." Tani giggled. Gauda smiled in
reply. "Yeah. Funny. But not for
Hasset. It seems while working as a lowly cargo handler he's
managed to build up quite a nest egg. Gambling, he says.
But he does have a fair amount to lose." Her smile sweetened.
"And somehow the man he accused has found out about all those
nice credits. Not a million, but if even part of the claim is
allowed it'd wipe Hasset out and garnish his wages for the rest
of his life. We're trying to persuade Hasset that we can get the
suit dropped if he talks. Loud, clear, and very, very fully. We
want every question answered honestly with all he can tell
us." "And?" Storm's eyes were
savage. "He's thinking about it. If
you can give me times we may be able to prove some of his lies
back to him. If we do that we can legally probe him. Show him
that and he'll crack." She leaned forward. "He's a little man.
Never one to take big risks. He's in over his head with all this
and he's scared to death. Every time I question him he's standing
there sweating in panic. If we can show him an escape he'll take
it." "Sweating in panic?" Storm
said slowly. "That isn't a man who's just scared of losing
credits. That's a man who sees an immediate threat. Why does he?
Because I think he knows if he talks someone will come after
him." He paused, leaping to a sudden conclusion. "Or perhaps
because they're already here! Where's he being held?" Gauda was on her feet, hand
slapping a switch. "Theo, check Hasset. I'm worried." "The doctor isn't here,
Manager Gauda." Storm wrenched the door open
and they were running, all three of them, Gauda in the lead. Down
corridors until they came to the open door of a storeroom. Inside
the doctor bent over the prisoner. Gauda stopped dead and groaned
in frustration. It took only a brief glance. Hasset the liar lay
sprawled, face blue, eyes staring, body contorted in a last
agony. Dr. Theo Blandaay looked up.
"Too late, I'm afraid. He's taken farakill." Storm drifted
silently forward as the doctor turned back to his patient. His
hands went out to close on pressure points in the doctor's neck.
Theo slumped. "Hoy, that's..." Gauda was
protesting. "The man who killed Hasset,
I suspect. Look, when you found Hasset you questioned him. Was
this man there?" "Of course. He's doctor for
the port." "Did you search Hasset
before you locked him in here?" Gauda nodded. "One of the
peacekeepers did it. A good thorough job too." "Yes," Storm said softly.
"So where did the farakill come from?" He stirred Dr. Blandaay's
limp body thoughtfully with one foot. "He'll stay out another
twenty minutes or so. The question is, how did he know it was
time? That we could have something to make that poor fool talk.
Or was he just afraid the man would betray him as soon as the
pressure went on?" Tani had been silent; now
she trotted away, back to the port manager's office. She
returned, followed by Gauda's assistant. Before either Gauda or
Storm could question that, Tani was asking questions of her
own. "Your name?" "Falia Tedisco, I'm
assistant to Port Manager Gauda." The young woman's stance was
proud, her eyes defiant. Gauda intervened. "Falia was
promoted to be my assistant a year ago. I trust her as myself."
She looked at the girl. "Falia, this is nothing against you.
We've had another killing. Help Tani. Answer her questions." They
watched as Falia relaxed, her stance now indicating a willingness
to reply. "You know Dr.
Blandaay?" "Yes. He became port doctor
soon after I was promoted to assistant." Her tone was
edged. "But you don't much like
him?" "Weeell..." Falia was
doubtful. "It's not that he's ever said or done anything to
me. But he acts as if no one is as important as he is. And
I heard him being rude about Manager Gauda once. He seemed to
think she didn't do her job as well as others could." Her face
flushed. "It isn't true. Manager Gauda is the best the port has
ever had. Why, since she took over the port revenues have
tripled. And without setting ship captains against us. She knows
where to spend money and where to cut wastage and..." Tani smiled. "And you think
the doctor might not have always liked where the cuts were
made?" "No. Everyone knows he was
taking money to help ship crews with sickness. Manager Gauda
added that to the port log." Tani looked to Gauda for
explanation. The middle-aged manager was looking both surprised
and amused at the revelations. "It seems I stepped on
Blandaay's schemes without knowing it. And while 'everyone' might
have known what he was doing, I wasn't one of them. It went like
this: The man's been here on Arzor a long time. He didn't work
for the port full time but he was paid a small retainer to come
and see to the staff when necessary. I've never heard anything
against him. So when I reorganized I hired him as full-time port
doctor. That meant he was hired at a flat salary to tend any crew
from a ported ship who might arrive ill and to clear ship crew
after looking them over for any signs of illness. I had no idea
he was taking extra payment for that. But, recently, when I
rewrote the new port greeting for incoming ships, I included the
information that he was the port doctor as a matter of record."
She laughed. "I can believe Blandaay
wouldn't appreciate that. I ruined his extra income since all
ships after that would know they didn't have to pay his extra
fees. Falia, why didn't anyone mention this to me?" "We all thought you knew.
That you'd chosen that way of fixing the problem without stirring
up trouble." Tani nodded. "You probably
would have done it that way if you had known. Now, Falia, today.
You were in the outer office before myself, Storm, and Manager
Gauda all came hurrying out. Who else was there?" "No one." The girl looked
puzzled. "You chased out all of the others. There was just me
left. The doctor went off to check port records or something next
door. He came out a few minutes later and went away. Then you all
came running out." "Next door?" Gauda moved. "Thank you,
Falia. Go back to your office now. I want you to call the patrol
office once you get back. Make sure no one hears you. Tell
Officer Versha that I request her attendance as soon as possible.
Say it's code black." She waited until Falia left, shutting the
storeroom door behind her. Then she stared down at the sprawled
figures. "You were right. The record room next door is from the
old administration when security was more casual. It opens to
both Falia's office and my own. Blandaay had only to ease the
door ajar and listen." Tani started to speak and was waved
silent. "No, you didn't see that. You wouldn't. The door into my
office isn't used much. With the renovations going on in the
building there's a stack of interior lining sheets leaning across
it on my side. But the door opens inward to the record
office." Storm saw. "So he could open
the door a fraction, hear everything, and then make sure Hasset
couldn't talk." Remembering events during his war years he
sighed. "He may have told Hasset that he'd give him a pill. One
which would help Hasset resist deep probe." Gauda looked disgusted.
"Hasset would certainly have been dumb enough to believe it. We
were supposed to stay up there talking a while longer. Then we'd
have come down, found Hasset dead, and had no idea that it was
more than the suicide of a guilty man. This is a storeroom. Not a
cell. There's no record of who enters or leaves." She looked at Storm. "If you
hadn't suddenly wondered why Hasset was sweating so hard we'd
have missed it all. Blandaay must have stayed just long enough to
hear me say that with the times you two could give us and the
amnesty I'd offer, I was sure we could break Hasset." Storm's answering smile was
ferocious. "So we can't break Hasset now. But what odds would you
give me that our healer here doesn't know even more?" "No odds," Gauda said
cheerfully. "I never bet against sure things. Storm, make sure he
doesn't come to again yet. Then watch him a moment. I know where
there is a spare roller pallet. We'll take him up to my office.
First we search him down to the skin. If he had farakill on him
there should be traces somewhere. I suspect Versha will be on her
way. Once we tell her all of this she'll act. Versha is something
of a hothead. That's why she's on a backwater outer planet. She
acted fast once before. She was right but she annoyed some
powerful man who was embarrassed by her actions. She'll enjoy
this." Versha swept in with a
uniformed probe operator in tow minutes after they wheeled
Blandaay to Gauda's office. The patrols officer on Arzor was a
round, plumply innocent-looking woman. But her black eyes in the
dark-skinned face were sharply penetrating and intelligent. She
listened to the saga, nodded to her operator, and herself helped
them dump Blandaay into Gauda's chair, fastening his hands and
feet firmly. Then she hitched a buttock onto the desk
edge. "Get on, boy. If we start
before he's come properly awake he'll be under before he can
start fighting it." Storm and Tani said nothing.
Doing it that way was illegal but neither planned to protest.
Blandaay wouldn't remember, and if he was guilty as they believed
then it was better he had no chance to fight his way to
mindlessness. The probe lattice was slipped on, patches and
sensors connected, and the questioning began. Kelson arrived
halfway through. Falia ushered him in and left again. Her eyes
averted from the thing which babbled in the chair. Kelson opened his mouth,
listened to what Blandaay was saying, and shut his mouth again.
Blandaay was confessing that he'd been corrupted long ago, that
he'd come to Arzor from his home world of Lereyne to escape a
charge of negligence. That he'd been helped, had that complaint
wiped back home, that the whole of his almost twenty years on
Arzor he'd been in the pay of someone. First renegades, men who
took quiet profit from the Xik. They'd fled after Storm had
exposed the surgically altered Xik aper who led them. After that
another had come who knew the secret. Blandaay had been offered a
choice: The whip, or the carrot. A fat, very juicy and profitable
carrot. If aiding the enemies of
humanity hadn't bothered him, then working for a mere Thieves
Guild member had worried him still less. Blandaay had snatched at
the carrot. It hadn't entailed much in the time he'd been on the
payroll. Just allowing the occasional crew member in on the
quiet, ignoring any irregularity his master didn't want noticed.
A doctor is in a good position to notice things about others
though. Blandaay had his standing orders for a profile on any
permanent member of the port staff. Then finally a more specific
order. He was to approach a cargo handler and suborn him. Have
the man sneak three people through the sealed port. Blandaay had
protested. It was dangerous. What if the man was seen, what if he
was taken and talked? That was discounted. He was a doctor wasn't
he? Let him dispose of the man once his usefulness was done. Let
Blandaay remember what could be told to the authorities if he
failed. The doctor had shivered—and obeyed. Versha nodded slowly. "All
right. Let him rest a few minutes. Search him now. If we find
traces of farakill on him we can fully justify this
interrogation. If not—" She grinned. "Well, I've been in
trouble before." A short time later she was eyeing the result.
Gingerly she picked it up, crushing the capsule. "Looks as if
I've been declared right. That's farakill." The silvery crystals
glistened. "Gauda, have your lab check if it matches the spectrum
in Hasset's bloodstream. If so we're in the clear and this
interrogation tape is legal as well." She reached for the office
intercom. "Falia, call the port lawyer. Tell him we are asking
for a probe permit for a Dr. Blandaay. And check if he has a
lawyer of his own. If he does, call him here too." She reset the
switch, cutting off the girl's surprised agreement. "I'm gambling it will match,
and that call will leak as well. It'll take the lawyers half an
hour to get into action. But the leak will probably be with this
filth's boss in a few minutes." She grinned cheerfully. "Let's
just get that question answered and start making him look
presentable again." She signaled the probe operator. "Blandaay. The Thieves Guild
man, who is he? Tell us about him. Everything you
know." "M-m-m. Marrice." "Yes, good. Marrice
who?" A silly smile spread over
Blandaay's face as his voice shifted into the harsher accents of
Lereyne. "There was a little fishy who lived in a net," he
chanted. "Net, debt. Debt paid." He choked. His face congested,
and he slumped down in his seat. Versha uttered several
words. "Too late. He was sealed against betrayal. A very nice
piece of conditioning—if it really worked. That last
bit sounded as if it came right out of his subconscious. If we'd
started the probe when he was completely conscious he'd have died
the moment he tried to reply. He was only half conscious so he
took longer for the conditioning to work. We just may have got
something." She pounced on the switch. "Population lists? See if
Falia can do a scan for anyone at all with the first name of
Marrice." Gauda shook her head, her
hand stopping Versha from touching the switch. "No need. I think
I can guess. There's a man named Marrice Plarron. One of my
patrol friends from Lereyne was talking to me a while ago. Jared
wondered where Plarron's money comes from." Versha looked puzzled.
"Plarron, what does that have to do with debts or
fish?" "Blandaay came from
Lereyne." She saw light leap in Storm's eyes. "Yes, you've
remembered." She looked at them. "On Lereyne there's a major port
on the inland sea. I know the man who's port manager there. It's
a fishing port. Specializes in canning, drying, producing
dehydrated flakes. Just about anything you can do with fish for
export. A lot of ships land there direct for cargoes." She took
in a deep breath. "It's called Port Plarronet." Versha moved purposefully to
the intercom. "I'll have a word with the peacekeepers. I think
with my authority that's enough to have him picked up. Probing
may be a different matter." So was collecting Marrice
Plarron. Those who went to scoop him in found the net empty.
There was a hunt, but Marrice Plarron was gone. However in his
panic to get clear of retribution he'd left enough odds and ends
of only partly destroyed information to be useful. It became a
matter of putting the jigsaw together. In that, Storm and Tani
could be little help. Storm rode the basin lands
and the ranch had never been so meticulously run. Tani spent time
spacegramming her aunt and uncle. Kady and Brion had contacts in
strange places. And it could be surprising what unworldly
scientists sometimes learned. For the two who ran the ark, they'd
even pass it on. Maybe if the net was flung wide enough something
might be trawled up. Logan was recovering slowly;
Brad had him back at the main ranch in a month. Time dragged on
and they were no closer to knowing where Surra, Hing, and her
babies might have gone. All they could do was hope that the
beasts still lived. By now the kidnappers would be reaching
several planets. Once ported they could disappear. Then there came a call from
Gauda. They'd partly broken the false ID provided for the raider
ship. Not what it truly was, but the world providing it. Trastor!
And more, several linguists had listened to the record made of
the brief words Mandy had overheard. The accent was lower
merchant-class from the world of Brightland. Overlaid with a
would-be upper-level accent. The combination rang bells with a
peacekeeper chief at Brightland's largest city. "He's sure it's a woman
named Ideena. She calls herself Lady Ideena and travels with a
man named Baris. They're a dangerous pair. Into all sorts of
dirty crimes. He says Ideena is the worst. Both are vicious but
Ideena has brains as well. They have no known connection with the
Thieves Guild. Ideena likes to run things and it's unlikely she'd
join. But they could have been used to get a guild member into
Arzor and out again. It's a starting point." "Do they have any idea where
she is at the moment?" "He's done some private
asking about through personal friends and contacts. She was last
known at Staril Port on Lereyne. It's thought she was intending
to ship on to Trastor. Versha's passed all this on to her
superiors. She'll take a patrol courier ship to Trastor in two
days to make further inquiries. She says if Storm would be
interested in helping with that she can find space." Tani's eyes widened as
Storm's eyes narrowed in suspicion. "Why? The patrol doesn't
usually invite civilians." "Versha says this time it's
different. The raiders could have started a war. And I gather her
immediate superior loathes the Thieves Guild. She's also hoping
that you may be able to sense your beasts if you get close
enough." "In other words I'd be a
ferret being put down a rat hole to see what comes bolting
out." "You've got it. Are you
in?" Storm nodded. He most
certainly was. Chapter
Eleven The circus had been pulling
in crowds. Cover, it might be, but Dedran was delighted. Laris,
too, was pleased. The animals were always happier playing to a
crowd. They understood the approval, the shrieks and applause.
Credits had flowed in. The whole circus atmosphere lightened.
Dedran was even pleasant to Laris, who was surprised but hid it.
She supposed that his boss, whoever that might be, preferred the
circus to pay its way. And what pleased his boss pleased
Dedran. Prauo enjoyed seeing the
performances through her eyes. He still spoke little most of the
time but increasingly she was aware of his emotions. It seemed
that he was aware of hers as well and sometimes when she was
unhappy he'd transmit scenes from the better times. Or just the
remembered feeling so that she laughed and felt happier. Their
performances in the ring drew crowds, which always pleased
Dedran. Prauo playing the ferocious predator, kept only in check
by Laris, dressed in her boy's costume, with a whip and
courage. Dedran preferred it to
appear there were more performers than there were in fact. So to
that end Laris appeared in a different costume, makeup, and wig
for each of the acts in which she was involved. She loved being
in the ring. The feel of the animals' anticipation, their
innocent pride in the applause and a job perfectly done. And she
had no need to strike any of them, only to pretend she did in the
tigerbat act. That pleased both her and Prauo. She wondered when Cregar
would return. He'd been gone just long enough to be due back if
nothing much had gone wrong. It was nice staying somewhere for a
while. There were times when she wondered wistfully what it would
be like to have a real home. To be settled. To live on a ranch,
say, on Arzor. To ride the land knowing it was yours to care for,
to live on for the rest of your life. To love. She wondered what
Storm and Tani were doing just now. And Logan. Particularly
Logan. She'd liked him. More than
she wanted to admit. But she was bonded. There was no future for
her there. Not until the bond was canceled, and not even then if
he ever discovered her part in his brother's loss. Oh, yes. There'd been a
spacegram from Ideena's ship. Laris had managed a brief sight of
it and been interested to learn that there'd been a good season
for swingleberries and that Baris and Ideena had placed and
received a very large order on Dedran's behalf. Laris grinned wryly. Dedran
wasn't so smart. He'd left that lying about briefly, believing it
would tell nothing to anyone who read it. She'd done so, seen
who'd sent it, and guessed the simple code. Cregar had made a
real haul of beasts. They had to be some of Storm and Tani's
teams. She mourned both for the humans she'd liked and the
bewildered animals torn from their homes. They'd be here any day
now and it would be her duty to keep them alive. "Laris!" The voice was a
whip-crack. She turned submissively and Dedran's look became
approving. "Prepare the hidden cages. Cregar will be here
tomorrow." "How many do I
prepare?" His look was triumphant.
"Three of them. Plan space for a pair of beasts of medium size,
one of large, and a number of small." He stalked away, every line
of his departing body shouting his pleasure in the catch. Laris
watched him retreat, remembering. Not the birds, by the sound of
it. She would guess at Surra, the coyotes, and some of the
meercats. Laris hurried off to
prepare. She cleaned the cages again, strewed fresh bedding,
checked the water and feed systems, and went over the gate
mechanisms. The cages were ingenious. Each was built into the
back of a cage used genuinely for some of the circus animals. A
door could be opened at one end revealing stacked gear with hay,
straw, or Tirevian peavines—the soft lengths of that
vegetation being popular as cheap bedding. But that stack of bedding
was a decoy. It appeared to fill the rest of the space from floor
to ceiling. In fact the wall was only one bale thick. If one
operated a hidden sliding door at the other end of the cage back,
there was room to enter. Behind the bales there was a space,
large or small, according to cage size. Concealed holes let in
air. Concealed lights could be left on at different levels. A
pair of peepholes at different heights allowed anyone inside the
hidden section to see out, both into the outer cage, and outside
onto the circus concourse. And the partition which
closed the space off from the open part of the cage could be
removed. When nothing was hidden this was done. On a few
occasions Dedran had maneuvered peacemen into ordering the space
emptied to check. He—or perhaps his patron—had then organized a complaint
about overzealous security upsetting the animals and the peacemen
had been reprimanded. On such worlds most peacemen now left the
circus strictly alone. After all, it had been proven that the
circus had nothing to hide. "Laris?" She emerged from
the last cage and stood waiting. "Is everything ready?" She
nodded. "Good. I've had word. The ship lands in an hour. You'll
be here to take charge of the beasts. Settle them in, feed and
water them, then report to me. To me, you understand? If Cregar
is with me you'll return later." She wanted to ask if Cregar
was now suspect in the shadowy world where they all lived. But
she knew to say nothing. Instead she simply nodded again. Dedran
produced a smile. It was a poor effort but then it was too rare
to be anything else. She noted that too. He must be
pleased. "Run along now. Make sure
the tigerbats are ready for their performance this afternoon.
I'll call you once the animals arrive." Laris ran. Her obedience
would please her bond-master, and right now she wanted to please
him. If she could care for the kidnapped beasts she might be able
to help them. Make sure they remained alive and in good
condition. The more Dedran approved of her the better the chance
that she could do that and he'd agree to anything she might claim
the animals required. She kept an eye on the
circus entrance, so was the first to notice the man who strolled
in, closely followed by two people she remembered. Cregar was
disguised; they were not. But she knew Cregar by his walk. She
withdrew silently behind the row of cages, watching. Behind them
came cargo pallets on lifters. There was no sound from them. They
appeared to be stacked with bales of animal bedding. Laris snorted. Dedran had a
one-track mind with his secrecy, using the same tricks over and
over. He'd better watch out. People who got into ruts were often
buried in them. Cregar was looking about for Dedran who appeared
quickly. They spoke briefly then Cregar and the other two
strolled away. She allowed herself to be seen now. The circus
boss waved her over. "Laris, take this bedding to
the supply area. Take care now. We don't want any
wasted." She understood the order.
"I'll be careful, Dedran. I know this lot's in short supply
lately." Her tone was very faintly sarcastic. He gave her a sharp look and
she reminded herself not to be too pert. Dedran could be stupid
in some ways. But he was smart enough to keep a close eye on her
if she angered him, and happy enough to beat her if he thought
she was overstepping her status. She towed the pallet away, doing
her best to look dumb and innocent. Dedran stared after her
thoughtfully. That reply had been a little too independent. Laris
had come back from her holiday on Arzor a trifle too inclined to
act as if she owned herself instead of belonging to Dedran. He
watched, considering his options with her, as she and the pallet
rounded the corner of the cage and vanished from his
sight. Away from the circus boss,
Laris glanced about. There was no one in sight. She reached up to
flick open the hidden latch at the back of the cage and shove the
pallet forward into hiding. Then safely under cover inside the
first cage, Laris unloaded drugged coyotes and cursed her quick
tongue. She'd managed to turn slightly, to look back, as she
moved the pallet. She'd seen that considering look. Please let
him forget her words, she thought, let him write them off as just
a pert bond-servant. She settled the unconscious coyotes and
checked them. No injuries, and they did not appear to be thinner
than they should be. It looked as if they'd been eating well
enough. In the next cage she
unloaded Hing and the babies. She sat a moment cuddling them.
They were so cute. So sweet. Maybe she could make real friends
with the babies. Although most likely Cregar would have that in
mind for himself. Still, the animals had met her. They might be
prepared to respond to one they'd associate only with their own
people. They might connect Cregar with their abduction. She left
them reluctantly, watching for anyone who might see her as she
exited. Then she moved the pallet
on. The last animal would be under the second false flooring. If
it was Surra it would take Laris all her time to shift the big
cat. She was almost to the cage she had ready when Cregar
appeared quietly. "I'll take her. You make
sure no one can see behind this row. Shift a screen to block it
off." She did so hastily, then held the door open briefly as the
unconscious cat was raised and carried inside. Laris leapt in
behind them and closed the door silently before flicking on the
light. "Get that door locked.
Hurry." He carried Surra forward, placing her on the bedding with
a sigh of relief. Now that she could look at the animal Laris
restrained a cry of anger with difficulty. Cregar saw her face.
He didn't want the child to think this was his fault. "It wasn't me. That Ideena
is an idiot. A space warp. She shot the beast master's brother
and the cat came toward Ideena so she shot the animal as
well." Laris moved so that her face
was hidden. Keeping her voice quiet and level by iron will she
asked, "What about the boy? He was killed?" Cregar shrugged. "Not then.
He was alive when we left and once we were at altitude I saw
someone a few miles out riding toward the house. He should have
survived." He stroked Surra's shoulder. "I hope so. Authorities
are a lot less bothered about chasing leads if no one's dead.
It's this one I'm worried about though. We've kept her asleep the
whole journey. She's been fed intravenously but she has to wake
up sometime." "She met me. Maybe if I'm
the only one to take care of her she'll stay alive," Laris
offered. Cregar grinned knowingly.
"And maybe if you're the only one she knows she'd bond to you. I
don't think so, girl; it doesn't work that way with a beast from
a trained team. Besides, even if she did, you wouldn't want to go
where she'll end up. No. You feed and water them all. Clean them
out when it's needed. I'll be the one who works with them. You're
not to have any more to do with them than you need while doing
your work. Understand? I might not punish you if it happens but
Dedran will and his hand's heavier anyway." "I know." He eyed her sharply. "Has he
been beating you again?" "Not much." She allowed her
shoulders to move uneasily as if in memory. It had been weeks
since Dedran had clouted her for anything but Prauo had reminded
her of the plan. She knew Cregar disapproved of Dedran's habits.
She'd added a set of bruises to her arm as well. Now she let her
sleeve ride up so they could be seen. She shifted her shoulders
again and winced. "And Dedran said I'm to
report about the animals to him." She invested the next words
with significance. "When you aren't around." Cregar looked disgusted.
"Man's crats," he muttered half to himself. Then to her, "Do as
he says. Don't get caught doing anything he forbids. And don't go
poking around. Too long a nose can get cut off." He smoothed
Surra's fur one last time and stood, pushing Laris before him out
of the hidden cage. But not before she had seen the quick flare
of rage in his eyes. He hadn't liked that last bit, or what it
implied about Dedran's trust. "How are the tigerbats? You kept up
their training?" "Of course," Laris said
indignantly. "Don't get upset, I was just
checking." He dug his hand into his pocket and produced
something. "Here. You're a good kid. I know you stayed out of my
stash too. I brought you something. Just don't wear it on Arzor
if you're ever there again." Laris cradled the ring in
her hands, admiring it. She raised wide eyes to Cregar. "It's
beautiful. Thank you. But why can't I wear it on Arzor?" Her face
fell. "Oh, you stole it from the Quades." "Let's say I happened on it
around their place. Don't worry. It's pretty but it isn't worth
much. That's ordinary silver and the stone's flawed. You might
get a couple of credits for it at a thieves' market, that's all.
I reckon it'd been sitting for years at the bottom of the box
where Ideena found it. I doubt they've even noticed it's
gone." He was wrong about that. It
had been one of the first items Brad Quade had missed. Raquel,
his wife, mother of Storm by her first husband, and mother of
Logan after her marriage to Brad, had owned the ring. But it had
descended to her from her own grandmother. The silver and the
stone had both come from the Navaho lands on Terra. Raquel's
great-great-grandmother's husband had dug both, shaped them into
a gift for his adored one. He'd engraved a cat's head on the
stone because her name was Walks-Soft-as-a-Puma. Raquel had died. But the
ring waited for a new woman of the line to take it up. It was
family custom that only a woman of the blood should wear it. The
next one eligible would be a daughter of Hosteen or Logan. Of all
the items stolen, Brad had noticed the absence of the cat ring
first. The other jewelry he'd bought for Raquel. Most of the
pieces were cat's-eye items and had come from Arzor. He was sorry
they'd gone but they could be replaced if he wished and had any
reason to do so. The ring was an heirloom,
irreplaceable. Cregar was right in that it
had little commercial value. Its value was sentimental in both
senses of the word. To the family certainly. But also on a market
composed of many who had lost the world of their birth. Assured
that the ring had come from Terra, that it was old, made from
natural materials from Terra, there were a good number of people
who'd have paid a very reasonable price for it. Far more than the
silver and flawed stone would normally fetch. Brad knew this. Ideena would
have, had she realized where the ring had been created. He hoped
that wherever it had gone, in whoever's hands it ended, they'd
appreciate it. Without knowing any of that, Laris did. Now and
again as she worked through the rest of that day she admired the
green gleam of the stone, the brighter glow of the polished
silver. The small cat head had been carved with consummate skill,
the curves and hollows making it appear as if the tiny head was
alive, the minute eyes watching her with interest. Laris worked hard. At
intervals she returned to check each of the drugged beasts. Hing
and the babies had been drugged only lightly. They were the first
to stir. Laris cradled the sleepy kits in her hands again,
reaching out with her mind as she did with Prauo. They responded
in thoughts which were formless as yet: only emotions of warmth,
comfort in her hands, and a small, diffuse trust. Hing's mind was clearer as
the drug dispersed. But she too relaxed with Laris, to the girl's
delight. After that she tried the coyotes again. She knew that
Cregar had hoped the adult animals might bond with him since
their beast master was not trained. One touch against their
emotions and Laris knew he'd be disappointed in that. It was
Ferarre who touched back. His mind was cunning and coldly angry,
fixed on his own human and the demand for her. Laris saw to the coyotes'
needs and left them quietly to themselves. Let Cregar break
himself against that will; she would not. Nor would she seek to
break the animals to hers. But still she worried. Dedran would
not heed what was said about the beasts' determination to accept
no other master. He expected Cregar to succeed. If the
ex—beast master failed, the circus
boss would have no hesitation in taking samples, then disposing
of the uncooperative beasts. Out of interest Laris had
read a lot on the beast master/beast team links. A human began
with the ability to reach animals by mind-touch and empathy, but
something in that continual touch created a bond over time. In
training the bond was reinforced, both by the constant practice
and by psychological factors as a gene-altered team and their
human learned to trust each other and share their senses. However
some of the bond's strength could depend on the abilities of the
human. Laris could tell by Ferarres's obstinacy, that, untrained
as Tani might be, still her abilities were powerful and her team
was bonded to her very strongly. Storm, of course, had been
trained with his team so that Surra and Hing would never accept
another in his place. Dedran was not going to like any of
that. He'd soon be calling for her
too. She hurried to check Surra last of all. The cat lay
motionless, only the slow rise and fall of her flank betraying
that she still lived. Laris squatted to study the injuries. They
were healing. Clean, not puffy, no indication of infection. But
the cat had retreated into sleep and clearly intended to remain
thus. Well, Laris could give as good a report as possible. That
might buy them all time. As soon as she had finished
her rounds Dedran demanded her presence. The evening performance
would begin in an hour. Laris went to his office, already wearing
part of her costume for the public performance. She also wore the ring, hung
on a chain about her neck under the high collar of her uniform.
Better not to let her bond-master know of the gift. "Well, you've seen all the
new beasts. Are they well?" "The coyotes are angry but
healthy. The meercats are all well and prepared to be friendly.
The cat is still asleep. The injuries heal. Better she sleeps
now, she will heal faster," Laris reported quietly. Dedran permitted the corners
of his mouth to curl upward. "That's good. You think the cat will
eventually recover?" "I think she may, if she is
left to herself and not distressed." That might give Surra a
chance to survive if Dedran heeded. He was nodding. "Tell Cregar to leave her
be," he ordered. "Care for her yourself." He switched to a glare.
"Make no attempt to bind her to you. If I find you have, you'll
regret it and she'll be samples and ash. Now get out." She bowed
acknowledgment of the orders, then departed quickly and quietly
rejoicing. Surra had a chance. She'd keep the cat alive in hopes
that somehow Surra could return to Storm. Behind her eyes Prauo was
there. *It is well, furless-sister. When the cat-one chooses to
wake I shall aid you to speak to her.* He gave the chiming sound
in her mind that was his mental chuckle. *Cat shall speak to cat.
I think all shall understand each other.* Laris found she too was
smiling as she went about readying the tigerbats. The performance
over, she changed to her oldest threadbare clothing and went to
look in on Surra. There was no change and Laris sighed. Her hand
went up to trace the tiny cat head on her ring. Somehow she felt
that it would bring them all luck. In the camps she'd learned
that luck often ruled lives. *But more often it is
determination that calls the luck, furless-sister. Be strong. I
sense a change approaching.* *What?* *I know not, but I feel
movement in the ways that govern lives.* He could explain no more
than that. Laris wasn't sure what it meant but if Prauo was sure
good might be coming, she'd hope along with him. She slept that
night more peacefully than in several nights. She was up early to
check the beasts. First those in open cages, then those in the
hidden ones. Hing and the babies greeted her happily. The babies
climbed about her person, exploring pockets in search of tidbits,
while Hing sat in Laris's lap, churring a meercat's sound of
pleasure as the girl scratched behind her ears. From the doorway Cregar
grinned as he entered. That widened to an honest smile as the
babies deserted Laris to rummage through his pockets and stand on
his shoulders chewing mouthfuls of his hair. He stroked and
scratched them as they churred approvingly. "Cute little lot." He sat,
his face blanking as he reached out mentally. The ability had
been mostly lost but he could still feel something occasionally.
It was what gave him hope his gifts were not gone forever. "Too
young yet to bond, but they will. A few months and they'll be
ready." He eyed her. "Stay away from them. No, I don't mean
physically," as she would have protested. "Feed and water them
but don't try to build any bond. I know Dedran will have warned
you." "He did." "Remember it." Cregar's
voice was quiet and very sober. "He's got high stakes riding on
this game. If you're the one to spoil it he'll see you pay, until
death would be a blessing, for you and your cat both." She
nodded. "Smart kid. Dedran needs you right now. If this works out
he may be moved on. Then your bond runs out and if you vanish
possibly no one will come looking. Dedran would never admit you'd
know enough to be a danger. Until then keep your head
down." Laris nodded again in
silence as Cregar gently detached the babies and left. It
bothered her how much the man saw. Had he guessed that she hoped
to help Surra, or her other plan to escape? *It's good advice for you. I
think he has come to it independently. He has grown to like you;
he does not like Dedran. It would amuse him to see that one fail
in some way, just so long as neither Dedran's wrath nor that of
his superiors falls on Cregar.* Quite a speech for Prauo, and
Laris took heed of it. The coyotes were still
angered: by abduction, confinement, and the loss of their own
human. She cared for them but made no further attempt to touch or
communicate with them apart from a few soothing murmurs. They sat
in a corner of the cage, eyes fixed on her, but made no
overtures. She could feel their anger and understood it. She did
her best to show in her movements that she meant no harm and
wished only to do her work. They accepted that, moving to the
cleaned part of the cage once she'd done the first half. When she
left they were lying together, eyes staring at the
walls. Surra was still motionless
in her hidden cage when Laris entered. *She lies,* Prauo sent
mentally. *She is awake and watching when you do not see. She
remembers your scent. She is clever this one. She has made her
kills and plans to live to make others. She is weak. She must
mend. Until then she will lie.* Laris smiled at the pun.
*Would she understand me?* *If I aid.* She moved up and dropped
into a sitting position beside the still form. Then she opened
her mind and reached out. At first she could feel nothing, only a
wall between herself and the animal. Then Prauo slipped into
link. Laris reached again. Now she could feel the glow of anger,
the pain of wounds, the sullen determination not to yield that
burned in the big cat. Prauo approved. In the back of the girl's
mind he anchored her thoughts, strengthening the thread she spun
out to touch. Cat eyes opened to study her. A thought formed
without words, an emotion then pictures. A query. *Why?* Laris could see
behind it the events. Logan falling, the stench of blood. Surra's
fury and her charge, and then red agony, blackness. There was
also a sense of disgust with herself. She was battle-wise, yet
she had forgotten this. Too long from the war-trail she had
reacted in rage when the human-friend had fallen. Storm would
have reprimanded her for her recklessness. Laris understood both
feelings and question. Patiently she strove to explain. She was
as much captive as Surra. She would help if she could. For now
the path the big cat had chosen was wise. Let old skills be
recalled. Let her lie, as a predator waits at the den-mouth for
prey. In time the prey will come out, the kill will be made, if
only one is patient long enough. Surra did not understand time as
humans did but still she asked a query which could have been
translated that way. Laris did not know. If they
waited it might be that another would find them. Free them both
and the team-friends with them. They must be patient. Over and
over she repeated that together with the picture of a cat which
waited. The prey came when the prey came. Who could set a limit
on that time? *Storm?* That picture was
powerful. A compound of scent, sight, touch, and emotion. It
could be expanded to mean: This one who is loved, trusted, who
leads. Who is also equal. Laris clutched the ring in one hand.
Then she gathered her will. *Storm searches for you.*
Agreement flowed between them. Surra knew. Storm would find the
path, follow it to trail's end, and none would turn him from
that. Surra would wait until she was strong again. All this time
she had lain limp, eyes shut. Now she opened them to stare up at
the human girl. Golden eyes, fierce and determined. Eyes without
the knowledge of surrender. And in that moment Laris
knew what she had done. Perhaps it had not been by her hand. But
she had stood by. If she continued to stand aside she would be
responsible for events she could not accept. There was no way she
could get word to Storm of where his and Laris's stolen beasts
were held. But when the time came—and she was sure it
would—she would be prepared. She felt
her decision weigh her down. She could die if she challenged
Dedran. Prauo could die. *I prefer to live,
furless-sister.* Prauo mind-sent in response to that thought.
*Let us continue to work to that end. Let the sick one sleep
again. And you also, you are tired.* That was the truth. Laris
stumbled to her bed and fell on it wearily. Yet somehow she felt
good. She had made a crucial decision herself, had not had one
forced on her by others. She belonged to herself still. It was a
warm feeling. She reveled in it as she fell into the
dark. Chapter
Twelve On Arzor Logan healed
slowly. The injuries had been severe and Arzor, like many of the
more rural settled worlds, had little of the faster-healing
technology. Storm fretted at the lack of news. Tani rode Destiny,
retreating more often to the healing calm of the desert fringe.
She was welcome in the camps of the Norbies. They knew her to be
clan-friend to the Djimbut Nitra. What was good enough for the
wild ones of the clans was better still for the civilized
clans. That she wore some of the
jewelry of a Thunder-talker was impressive. The items meant that
while she had not received the training, she had the potential.
Because of it she was welcomed also in the tents of the clan's
shamen. It did not hurt that none but she or Storm could ride
Destiny. The filly was three-quarters duocorn. She bonded to her
rider, accepting Storm as an extension of her human friend. She
had not yet accepted a stallion. It was hoped that when she did
she would produce colt foals. This day Tani had ridden
over to the Larkin ranch. Put Larkin had a small place on the
edge of the basin where he sent mares due to foal. They had
warmer weather and better feed than in the High Peaks, and cooler
temperatures and fewer predators than on the edge of the Big
Blue, as the main desert was known. Tani leaned on a fence with
the middle-aged man, Destiny standing hipshot behind her, and
admired the first of the still wobbly new foals. "From Fate?" Once she'd
taken Destiny and named her, Put had been amused enough to call
the filly's half-brother by a matching name. Put shook his head. "Nope, I
don't reckon he should be used until next season when he's rising
three. I used a crossbred colt I already had for the main herd.
It makes them half-bloods with him and the mares both being
half-duocorn. Enough to add that duocorn toughness. Not so much
they bond to one person only." He grinned at her. "Not saying
many riders wouldn't appreciate that. But it makes it hard for
some." Tani knew. Not everyone
wanted to teach her own mount. And what about those ranches which
needed their horses to be available to any who might need a
mount? "What about Fate and
Destiny's dams?" "Risked him there. Just two
mares wouldn't spoil him. They'll foal later. Should be
interesting to see what we get. But maybe I'll have to sell them
to riders as can do their own training. They'll be five-eighths
duocorn. They'll likely bond. Dumaroy's already interested." He
laughed softly. "That won't go down well with any Nitra horse
thieves. Mounts they can't ride and which could be too dangerous
to even try stealing." The girl agreed with that.
Her filly, Destiny, had killed two men thus far. One, a Nitra
who'd tried to ride her against her wishes. The other was one of
the clan camp raiders who'd run into Destiny in the dark and
struck out angrily to drive what he believed to be a loose horse
from his path. He hadn't lived long enough to scream. Tani lingered, talking
casually. It felt good to be here in the sunshine. She could feel
her shoulders relaxing from the tense hunch they'd been in. The
heat soaked through her. The foals' play made her smile. Later,
the feel of Destiny's powerful body under her made her sing as
they cantered for home. She missed Minou and Ferarre painfully
but she'd learned to live with the loss—for the moment. She returned to an
atmosphere which was tense but, as she realized in the first
minutes, with information, not danger. She looked at
Logan. "What is it?" "You know the raider ID came
from Trastor? And there was a suggestion from Mandy's imitation
of them that the raiders could be Baris and Ideena. Brightland
thought they might also be on their way to Trastor." He spun it
out and Tani squealed in mock rage. "Tell me!" "It seems that whatever else
may or may not be right, that last bit was. They've been seen and
positively ID'd there." She sucked in her breath.
"That's wonderful. It is—isn't it?" "Not quite," Brad said
heavily. "Trastor says that the pair have done nothing against
its laws. It won't pick them up, won't hold them, won't do
anything but question them politely if we insist on it." He
looked at her. "Now Terra's gone, most
planets won't let another world tell them what to do. If they
believe we're trying to give them orders they'll dig their toes
in and we'll learn nothing. What's more, it would put that pair
on their guard and almost everyone in authority against
us." Tani froze, her mind racing.
People might well feel that way and she could accept it. But this
world owed a debt. Trastor, where her father Bright Sky had died
helping the people escape the invading Xik. Where he was buried
with a memorial calling the whole planet to acknowledge the debt.
She straightened, her face shifting into almost feral lines. The
raiders had stolen Minou and Ferarre. They had tried to kill her
kin, abducted Storm's team. "The patrol officer, Versha?
She said you could go with her to Trastor. I shall go with you.
I'll talk to the government. I'll tell them what they owe my
blood. If they forget I'll remind them. Make a fuss,
Asizi. Just in the upper levels. Give them no time to
spread the news. We're to be told when we're a couple of hours
out from port." Her voice was crisp and Brad blinked. He hadn't known his
stepson's wife except as a nice young girl with beast master
potential who loved Storm. He'd known her courage but forgotten
that with her aunt and uncle she'd landed on many worlds. Often
it had been Tani's job to order and check supplies for her kin's
huge ship. To make plain to the suppliers that she would not be
cheated or ignored because of her youth. He was hearing the voice
she saved for such times and it startled him. Storm gave his stepfather
one of his rare smiles. "As Tani says. Tell the government we'd
like cooperation." His smile turned into an intent expression
signaling danger to any who saw it. "If they can't see their way
to that, I may find and speak to this Baris myself." Brad winced. Baris wasn't
likely to survive that experience intact and the Trastor
peacekeepers wouldn't approve. He said so, to receive in turn a
flat blank look. Right now Storm didn't give a damn. Nor did
Tani, or Logan—who was demanding to be permitted
passage as well. Brad turned to deal with that. "You still need to
rest." Logan eyed him. "I can. It's
two weeks to Trastor even on a patrol courier ship. I'll spend
the weeks taking it easy. By the time I arrive I'll be fit to get
about." He caught Tani's attention and looked imploringly at her;
he had no wish to remain behind but his father might object. Tani
understood his plea, responding by nudging Storm, who
nodded. "Let him come, Asizi.
He saw the raiders face-to-face. He can verify that under probe
if need be. If he identifies this Baris and Ideena we can put in
an arrest warrant with proof to hold them. Versha would back that
with patrol status. Once the patrol has them they'll probe. We
find what they did with Surra and the others. Logan files charges
of theft, assault, breaking and entering, and anything else we
can legitimately bring. We may find out then who took the beasts
and why. I doubt it was this pair—they seemed more interested in
loot. Maybe the third one who was with them was responsible. But
these two were only guns for hire, if what their world says is
correct." Brad threw up his hands.
"Who runs two ranches while you three go galloping off halfway
across the known worlds?" "You, the same as always,"
was his younger son's retort. Logan laughed. "I'm no use to you
in bed anyhow. Besides which, I ride for the rangers most of the
time. Kelson's the one complaining about my being useless right
now. By the time I get back I'll have recovered enough to start
riding again. As for Tani, did you ever seriously think Storm
would go alone when part of her team is out there somewhere as
well?" "Not really. All right. So I
don't get any work out of the three of you for several months.
You'd better come back in good health. I can't afford to hire new
hands." Tani saw beneath the assumed gruffness and flew to him,
hugging him hard. "Don't worry. We'll be fine.
I'll look after these two. They'll look after me. Was there any
more news or is that it?" "Not exactly news." He
turned to glance at Logan. "This is about that nice child from
the circus. I promised I'd see what I could find from the camps
about her." Logan looked up sharply.
"You found something?" "A few minor items. She came
from the De Pyall camp on Kowar. She was able to tell me
approximately the date she was transported there. I checked
incoming traffic for that time frame. She got there on the old
Sally Ann, and I managed to connect to the captain. Still
the same man and he has records. Not great ones but enough to say
that the load she came in with were from the main De Pyall camp
on Meril as she'd thought." Brad snorted. "He copied me everything he
had and you've never read such a mess. Barely half on computer,
the rest on paper with portions crossed out, written over, then
written over again. I've accessed those lists for Meril though.
They have her on one. No real information. Still alone. No record
of where she came from to Meril. I think she said her mother died
at a camp farther back. But they do have the girl listed quite
clearly on Meril. Somehow they lost most of the name in the next
transit. She's only listed as 'Laris' on Kowar. But for Meril
she's Shallaris Trehannan." "Sounds like an English
name," Tani commented. "The Trehannan bit anyhow." "So I think. But Meril is
quite sure that none of those refugees came from Terra. Which may
mean either her family had lived elsewhere for a while, or that
she'd been transferred in from yet another of the camps. Since
she's sure she started out with her mother, there must have been
at least one previous move. I think there may have been a number.
They seem to have shuttled some of those poor damned refugees all
over half the systems during the war." His face went
bleak. "If the circus is there when
you arrive, let the child know what we have so far. It must be
hard for the girl not to even know her full name. Tell her I plan
to keep digging." Unspoken was the thought in all of their minds.
It would help Brad to keep his mind occupied while the rest of
his family followed another trail. "I can let her know about
the name," Logan offered. "It won't be too exhausting for a poor
invalid." His brother snorted. "I'm
sure it won't." Logan flushed then grinned. "So I'd like to see her
again. No crime." Storm's eyes were kind. "No
crime at all. She may even have seen something. After all, a
circus uses animals. It's possible someone could have approached
them offering to sell beasts. See if Laris has heard
anything." Brad spoke quietly. "If you
do ask, do it without anyone else hearing, son. I didn't take to
that boss of hers. I'd say he wasn't the most honest man around.
I doubt he'd take openly stolen beasts to use. Too much trouble
could come of it. But I suspect a couple of those tigerbats of
his may not be completely legal. They were all but wiped out on
Lereyne. Since they've been preserving them in special reserves
this last five years the bats are banned from being taken
off-planet." Logan looked puzzled.
"So?" "So Laris mentioned that the
two females aren't related to the other three. They're only about
two years old as well. He might just have bought them from a
reserve or some private collector on a different world. But it's
in my mind he could also have had them smuggled from Lereyne.
There'd be plenty of collectors who'd be ready to sign fake
papers for a price. But two unrelated females—they'd spread the gene pool, breed
far better. Tigerbats are becoming so rare now that any he breeds
would sell for high prices on several worlds with arenas we could
all name." Tani was thoughtful. "That's
true. We could also have Versha talk to Lereyne wildlife officers
about that. Lereyne may have some way of telling whether the two
young ones were born there. If so maybe I can get Laris to take
blood or tissue samples. If we prove the bats were smuggled then
Lereyne will apply for their return. If they fine Dedran they
might be able to confiscate the other three tigerbats as the
fine. I think Laris would like that. She doesn't like them being
in the circus. She says they aren't really happy
there." "Sounds like a possibility.
All right. You three start to get ready. Versha commed while Tani
was gone. She'll pick up any who are leaving at around nine-hour.
Get moving. You don't have that much time if you want to eat,
pack, and sleep before she arrives." They scattered at
once. Versha was on time, her
teeth showing white against the dark skin as her face broke into
a grim smile. "All three of you. I expected that. I heard the
Trastorian authorities were being difficult but there's ways
around that if you know the right people." She grinned with
wicked amusement. "I've talked to the patrol
officer on Trastor. Jared trained with me until he transferred to
the patrol. He confirms that the raider pair were seen again only
a few hours ago. He's arranged a stop on their own personal IDs.
If they try to board a passenger ship they'll be very politely
turned away. I've taken a precaution or two myself. He's also
identified their own ship. It looks as if they may be staying on
Trastor a while." Her smile broadened. "Oh?" Logan grinned
back. "Oh, yes. We don't want to
spook the game before we reach them. But he's arranged a small
party if it looks like they're planning to up-ship before we
reach Trastor. After all, they have the ship registered under a
false ID. And guess what?" She surveyed three amused faces. Storm
was the first to reply. "You've tied in the fake ID
with some complaint." "Exactly. So until they can
prove that the ship the complaint is listed against is not their
ship, then they stay right where they are." "Won't they realize that
it's a setup?" Logan queried. "Possibly. But they may also
assume that old enemies have caught up. Gods know they have them
if Brightland speaks true. The Trastor broker could have sold
them a fake ID to achieve just this. He'd deny it either way and
once he hears about this mess—and Jared has arranged that the
broker will hear first—he'll vanish anyway. We have a
front-man making the very serious and convincing complaint. It
can be tied in via Meril and if they get that far, to criminal
figures from Bright-land." Versha chuckled richly. "By the time they've
unraveled that rat's nest, talked to Trastor, Meril, and
Brightland, found no one there is involved—that will acknowledge it or help
them very much, and then traced back our front-man to Trastor
again. We could have had enough time to arrive, decide the
meaning of life, and arrive back on Arzor lifting on a ship
traveling solely by pedal-power. Believe me. They won't up-ship
until the patrol says so." By now all four were
grinning. It was bad enough trying to trace an error through the
bureaucracy of one planet. Trying to sort out a mistake through
the red tape of several was the sort of thing which sent the
would-be tracer completely crazy. Experienced bureaucrats had
even been known to turn green and resign on the spot at the
suggestion. The usual method was to come to an agreement with
one's opposite number. Cut out the whole loop and start again.
Except that for civilians with suspicious antecedents this wasn't
an option. Storm had been thinking. If
it was his problem he might just decide to act like a pirate. Cut
out the loop, not in records but in real life. He hoped Versha
had thought of that. Better to ask and find she had, than not ask
and discover the raider ship had quietly vanished from under the
authorities' noses. He asked. "Hmmmm. You and I would
think that way. Jared's a good man. But he's never been in the
field. His whole career's had him flying a desk. I never thought
to mention that chance. I'll check he's taken precautions. Boot
up the com for me while I get the code settings." Versha was back quickly,
taking over the seat Tani swiveled toward her. "Thanks." She
flicked a dial, moved a switch carefully, then spoke quietly. It
seemed little time before a slow voice answered. "Patrol Office, Trastor
sector. Jared Anwar speaking. That you, Versha?" "It's me. Listen, there is
no time to waste. Have you done anything physically to see the
ship we're interested in doesn't lift?" "Physically?" The slow voice
sounded startled. "But there's an injunction against departure on
the ship." "The owners don't seem to be
the types to necessarily obey court orders. If they lift and
clear Trastor how do you make them come back?" "Why, I ... well ... I
suppose we ... Um. Versha, have you any reason to think they
could try that?" "Only that they're wanted on
three worlds including their own under their real names. They've
had charges filed for everything from piracy in the space-lanes
to assaulting a spaceport official on Aubeare." Jared was diverted. "Why did
they assault the official there?" "I gather he wanted them to
file flight reports from their last couple of stops and as that
isn't normally a legal requirement, they didn't see why they
should. He tried to prevent them leaving so Baris shoved him down
the ship's ramp." "That's hardly a major
offense." "It can be on Aubeare; most
of their officials are minor members of the royal family. But
take a look at a few of the other charges. I've just spacegrammed
a list. I think you'd better take precautions, Jared. If that
ship vanishes, we may lose our best hope in years of getting a
line into some of the crime the patrol's been investigating since
the Xiks pulled their heads in. If that happens I can name you a
whole list of our superiors who won't be happy about
it." There was a thoughtful
silence. Then—"Just a minute." His voice was
raised in a shout. "Namor, in here." After that they caught
scraps of brisk orders being issued. Jared returned. "How much
force is reasonable?" "As much as you have to use.
Try to keep that precious pair alive. They won't do much talking
dead. But if it's the life of one of your people or theirs, then
shoot and we can hold a post mortem later." There was a moan at the pun.
"You owe me a round of drinks to wash that down. All right. I'll
put Jola in where she can overlook the ship." "I want it stopped, not
watched as it leaves." "Oh, don't worry about that.
She'll have a scramble-laser. One good burst in the right place,
the ship's navcomp is wiped, and emergency set-down is
instigated. It can't lift again until the navcomp is
recalibrated. Those old-fashioned ships don't have shielding
against a well-aimed scramble-laser. Jola's the lady to do it
too. She was one of the Trastor's best first-in commando fighters
until the Xiks quit." Versha's tone was envious.
"Just how do you rate a scramble-laser?" "Heh, she liberated it from
the Xiks before they pulled back. I slapped a requisition order
on it when she joined. Officially it's both her own personal
property and ours on permanent lease. That way it can't be taken
off us, it belongs to her." "And it can't be taken off a
civilian because it's leased by a secure department," Versha
finished. "Smart! If you run into any other civilians with a
scramble-laser and an urge to travel, let me know." "Will do. Now, I'd better
have a word with my peacekeeper opposite. If we end up making a
shambles of his area I'm sure he'll like to know why in
advance." "No!" Versha spoke sharply.
"The pair have friends. They weren't doing this on their own. Our
superior says keep events under your hat. We don't know who might
be involved in planetary circles. You say nothing. If you have to
kill this pair you refer him to me and say nothing until I
arrive. I'm bringing people in to file official charges on
Trastor." "They won't listen to
off-planet civilians." "They'll listen to these.
Get on with it, Jared. If you lose that duo our superiors may
have my head on the block, but they'll have yours first and for
sure. Versha out." She flicked a dial and the humming died. Logan
stood carefully. "Twelve days until we know
if he managed to hang on to them. I plan to spend the time
sleeping, eating, and exercising. Let me know when it's
dinnertime. I'll start with that." Storm nodded. "I hope Jared
can hang on to the ship." Tani turned to Versha.
"About Baris and Ideena. I suppose no captain on a passenger ship
would go against a patrol warning. How certain is it that the
pair can't hop a cargo ship if the captain takes a
bribe?" Versha developed a wicked
look. "Oh, fairly certain, I think. I had a confidential notice
circulated, saying that the patrol discovered a pirate group has
been getting spies aboard cargo ships. The spies either try to
get a look around at defenses and cargos, or try to persuade
captains or other officers into shipping them illegally. It is
suspected they then help the pirates to take the ship and dispose
of the crew." She smirked. "There's a very clear
description of Baris and Ideena included in the notice as
possible suspects, and Jared's people will be ensuring every
cargo ship arriving on Trastor receives that information. Under
the circumstances I doubt any captain or officer, no matter how
greedy, is going to touch that pair with a very long pole. But he
isn't likely to say why either if it makes a pirate group mad at
him personally. He'll come up with something moderately
believable and wish them happy voyaging—with some other ship.
Well?" Tani was giggling and even
Storm was smiling a little. "I'd give a lot to be there listening
to any of that," Tani assured her. "I think you have it covered.
But it's still going to be a long trip." It was, but even the longest
trip doesn't last forever. Twelve days after that
conversation they were two hours out of Trastor's main port
and signaling their arrival. From there they could also
pick up Brad Quade's discussion with the peacekeepers. Before
that became bogged down in refusals to act against the Lady
Ideena or Baris, Brad mentioned that incoming on an official
patrol vessel two hours out was Tani, daughter of Bright Sky, the
savior of Trastor. Tani believed she had suffered personal hurt
from this pair the peacekeepers were trying to protect. The
discussion and protection reversed abruptly. Chapter
Thirteen There was a small
committee—one man and his
assistant—waiting to greet Tani when the
patrol ship set down. As Brad had requested, it was not
ostentatious, nor had information of her arrival been given to
the press. Versha left her ship first and took up a position
which made it plain she was acting as a guard. Then Tani walked
down the ramp flanked by Storm and Logan, each a half-pace behind
her. "Gracious Lady, Trastor
welcomes the daughter of Bright Sky, savior of Trastor." The
welcoming official was a small man of innocuous appearance. From
an angle where he could not see what she did, Versha's hands flew
in the hand-signs used for communication between settlers and
natives on Arzor. "Cunning, do not
underestimate, this one is an important man." Without turning his head the
small man suddenly grinned. "Thank you, Officer." His attention
returned to Tani, his eyes studying her. He nodded once to
himself and offered her a slight bow. "Let me stop being polite
and start being cunning. This way." He ushered her to a
comfortable hovercar, saw to the safe seating of the other three,
then signaled to the assistant to drive. They moved off and the
man spoke quietly. "I am Under-governor
Larash-Ti-Andresson. My friends call me Anders. I hope you will
be friends. You would not know this, Bright Sky-Ti-Tani, but I
was one of the people your father saved. Later, if it is your
pleasure, I will take you to his memorial." He spoke almost
lightly but both Tani and Storm could sense the very real emotion
beneath the words. This man, whoever or whatever else he might
be, did indeed remember and honor the man who died helping to
free Trastor from the enemy. "I have reviewed what
information I have received so far," Anders continued quietly. "I
will summarize. Patrol Officer Versha has requested we take into
custody two citizens of the planet Brightland. These two, a Lady
Ideena and a man named Baris, are at present on Trastor. They
arrived openly, appear to have money, and own their own ship."
His lips quirked. "It may be a rather shabby and obsolete model
but it does belong to them. It is in spaceworthy condition and
carries all emergency beacons and supplies mandated by
law. "They have committed no
known felonies here, nor have any complaints been made against
them by citizens of Trastor. Apart from this we have received no
warrants against them for offenses committed on other worlds
which we would recognize as—to use the old term—extraditable. However I am told
they have committed crimes against you personally. You are here
to make a formal complaint and request that we act as Versha
asks. That we take these people into custody and question them
rigorously. Is this correct?" Tani simply
nodded. "But an ordinary complaint
about something which occurred on another world does not carry
over to ours," Anders said gently. Tani met his gaze. "This
does," she said flatly. "I am here as a representative of the
Nitra on Arzor. Patrol Officer Versha is present to verify my
complaint. I charge the people known as Baris and Lady Ideena
with attempted insurrection of a native race against the humans
of a 'settled world.' On behalf of the Nitra I charge theft of
sacred items which I can identify." She could see that Anders
suddenly looked grave, as well he might. It was one of the few
charges which could and did carry over to another world. No world
with a native race wanted some fool out there starting a holy war
against the humans. Still less did they wish the other nonhuman
races with whom they allied to think that Terrans did not take
such a complaint seriously. Anders opened his mouth and Storm cut
in. "I am here as a
representative of the beast masters unit in which I held a
commission. This may be verified on application to High Command.
They stand prepared. I charge those known as Baris and Lady
Ideena with acts of sabotage against a unit of the Terran
Command. In the course of which acts they injured a civilian,
committed theft and damage of property, and violated port safety
regulations. The government of Arzor has filed charges over the
latter. I carry the warrants for those and can produce them on
request." "Beast master unit? Terran
High Command?" Anders's voice was horrified. Storm descended from
the harsh emotionless attitude he'd assumed to impress the
Under-governor. "Anders." He leaned forward.
"That pair attacked a clan camp twice. They stole some jewelry
from the female shaman they'd stunned. The Nitra are leaving it
to Tani to sort out—for the moment. She's a
clan-friend." "Isn't that
unusual?" "She's only the second in
Arzor's history," Storm said tersely. "But the Nitra want
satisfaction. They want the jewelry returned with Tani and the
thieves provably punished. They'll settle for the thieves but not
the sacred items alone." "In other words they want
satisfaction." "Yes. As to the other
charge, that could become worse. You had a beast master living
here. Yes, I know he's dead," he added before Anders could
interrupt. "We have reason to think this pair may have been
involved with that death, or know who was. Listen." He spoke
slowly as the hovercar floated silently along the path toward a
series of office buildings. It halted as Storm finished speaking.
Anders exited the car and found Logan at his side. The young man
spoke very quietly and seriously. "Anders, you said no
complaint from a citizen had been received." He took a breath.
"But isn't Tani an honorary citizen of Trastor? I'm sure her Aunt
Kady said so once." The Under-governor eyed him.
"That is so. We decreed that Bright Sky was a citizen of our
world. It was a posthumous citizenship but you're correct. It
descends by law to any child of his living at the time it was
granted. It also gives me an unimpeachable reason to act." He
waved the others to join them, sweeping them with him to a large
office. There he sat and reached for a control panel. Into the
speaker above that, he snapped a string of brisk orders as he
switched from office to office. Then he looked at the
four. "That will set things in
motion. Officer, you have had your people here see to it that the
criminals do not depart unexpectedly." Versha smiled. "Oh, I think
they'll still be around." "So do I," Anders said
dryly. "That was a statement, not a question. I've heard
something about a complaint against a ship which may or may not
be correctly identified. I've also heard about pirates." He
leaned to the speaker panel and called for refreshments, then sat
back. "Let us wait in comfort while we see if my preliminary
endeavors bear fruit." He looked at Tani. "Do I gather two of the
stolen beasts are yours? Are you also a beast master?" "I was never trained. But
yes, I have the gifts and the coyotes are part of my
team." "If you are not officially a
beast master how do you come to have Terran animals?" Tani settled back. "I am the
niece of Brion and Kady Carraldo." She saw his look of
half-recognition and continued. "I grew up on their interstellar
ark working with animals and helping the scientists and my kin
there." The Under-governor's memory
released the information that had been teasing him and the back
of his neck went cold. Lord of Light! The ark was an invaluable
resource for every human-settled world. It was run and ruled by
scientists, but he guessed that scientific detachment did not
apply where it came to this girl if they thought Trastor was
ill-treating her. They might continue to assist Trastor, but
there were many ways in which they could deny a world what it
needed without appearing to flatly reject official
requests. Tani would not have dreamed
of using that power, nor would her aunt and uncle have considered
it. She did not even see the way Anders might be thinking. Storm
did, but said nothing. If a man thought that way you wouldn't
change his mind-set by arguing. If Anders believed that helping
Tani and laying hands on Baris and Ideena would keep Trastor in
credit with the ark, let him. He'd make sure Brion and Kady heard
of the man's help. How they reacted was up to them. Anders stood. "Please excuse
me for a time. There are certain things I must do. The burdens of
government." He chuckled a little and left. Versha stared after him.
"Not the fool he looks even if he was jumping to a few
conclusions there at the end." She dug a small comunit out of her
pocket and spun dials. "Jared?" "Jared here, Versha, where
the Hades are you and what have you stirred up? Every
peacekeeper, port official, and security beat-walker is out
buzzing around. There's a hunt for our two like you wouldn't
believe." "Yes I would. Never mind
that right now. Tell me everything you know about a man called
'Under-governor Larash-Ti-Andresson. My friends call me Anders.'
Small man. Looks meek and mild, rather harmless. Until you say
something important and see his eyes." She heard a sort of gulp
over the com. "Andresson? Oh, he's Under-governor all right. He
runs the security for Trastor. Peacekeepers, port police, private
guards, spies, anyone at all in those categories. He deals with
anything that may imperil Trastor's safety, autonomy, or internal
security. He isn't always soft-handed about how he does that
either. But he's honest and he's very good at what he does.
Particularly if he thinks what he does will help Trastor. He can
be ruthless but he's a patriot. To him Trastor is first in
importance, and other planets are nothing in
comparison." "Thanks. I think we've
convinced him it's in Trastor's interest to help us. Don't go
against him. But try to see that Baris and Ideena stay alive if
that's possible. Versha out." She snapped the comunit off
and tucked it away again. "You heard that, Anders? You can come
back now." The man who returned was the same until you saw his
face with the meek mask of minor officialdom removed. His gait
was firmly confident. His eyes showed a hard humor and wary
intelligence. "You knew." "As you
intended." "Only if you were bright
enough." "Take it that I am," Versha
requested. "And now that we both know who's who and what's what,
how is the hunt going?" "Mixed. They got to that
ship of theirs. They started to lift and at a thousand feet
someone hit them with a scramble-laser. Would you know anything
about that, Patrol Officer?" Versha out-stared him. "I see." He
continued. "Their navcomp emergency
system seems to have been ingeniously programmed. Instead of
setting down right where they'd lifted, it swung the ship and
landed in the next clear area. That turned out to be a park
twenty klicks from the port—that's about fifteen of your
Arzoran miles," he added for clarification. "No one was prepared
for that trick. By the time my people reached the spot whoever
had been in the ship had vanished again. We're questioning
everyone in the area but there's no information coming in as
yet." He frowned. "Have they
allies here, do you know? Anyone who might help them to hide or
escape?" Versha pursed her lips.
"When they hit Arzor they had someone with them. Logan here never
saw him, but Tani can verify that there were three people,
believed at the time to be innocent tourists, whom the clan
permitted to escape. We know three people also fled Arzor on that
ship. So yes, they do have a colleague of some kind. Whether he's
still here, who he is, or if he'd help, we don't know. But it's
possible. Ideena isn't likely to stop at blackmail to get under
cover." Anders smiled dangerously.
"We'll keep looking. Sooner or later someone will come trotting
in to say that their neighbor is behaving strangely. Until then
I'll make it clear to all the usual riffraff that it will not be
business as usual. Not until I lay hands on this pair. Set scum
to catch scum. The locals won't like having my men poking into
every corner of their business. After a while when we don't let
up they'll begin hunting for the pair themselves." "But will they hand them
over in shape to talk?" Logan spoke for the first time since
they'd arrived in the office. Anders nodded at him with
respect. "They will if I make it clear that if our duo aren't
alive I'll assume someone had something to hide and look even
longer and harder." He straightened, stretching. "It's likely to
take time though. Are you hosting your friends here,
Officer?" Versha glanced at her
companions. "I think so. The patrol do have a suite for visiting
VIPs. They can stay there until you want to talk again or there's
news." "It may not take long." His
look was grim. "On Trastor it isn't easy to hide when I'm the one
who hunts. We should have Baris and Ideena in a few hours, a
couple of days at the most." It was as well he'd taken no
bets on that. Ten days later Baris and Ideena might as well have
vanished tracelessly into a black hole and Under-governor
Larash-Ti-Andresson was not a happy man. Nor was Baris. He'd returned
abruptly from a card game in which he'd been winning. His boots
clattered up the ship's ramp and he'd yelled his partner's name
in tones which could peel paint at ten paces. "Ideena?
Ideena!" "For Ghesh's sake. What is
it?" "We're wanted." Ideena raised an eyebrow.
"That's so unusual?" "Not what, who," Baris
snapped, confusing her. She stared. "Who? What? What
the Crats are you talking about, you idiot? Make
sense." "That cursed Andresson has
every peaceman out asking for us. We're wanted for questioning on
interplanetary charges. If his people take us they can legally
use deep-probe on charges like that. I'm getting out and I'm
getting out right now! You can please yourself." He dived for the
control room and Ideena followed. "They have an
injunction..." "They can stick their
injunction." "That's the patrol you're
talking about. They may have it backed by something," Ideena
warned. She moved into the seat next to his, strapping down
swiftly. "I'll take my chances. I
want out of here." Since that applied to Ideena as well, she said
no more. Baris's hands raced across the controls, programming the
navcomp and firing up the engines. Then he applied thrust. By now
the port control office was uttering a string of threats and
warnings. The chant grew louder and more indignant as the small
ship began to rise. "...subject to penalties
under law of not less than half the value of any cargo, and
pending decision on value to be levied against the offending
ship..." Baris slammed a hand down and the indignant voice faded
as the ship rose. "We did it," Ideena yelped.
The ship shivered. The navcomp emitted an almost human groan and
every light it had began to flash. From the panel behind it a
voice alarm sounded. "WARNING. WARNING. SET-DOWN
ACTIVATED. NAVCOMP UNCALIBRATED. WARNING. WARNING. SET-DOWN
ACTIVATED." "What?..." Baris was working furiously.
He spared her a glance, his eyes half crazed with fury and
terror. "A Ghesh-damned scramble-laser. They used a
scramble-laser on us." "Can they do
that?" "They just did. Shut up. I
programmed something into the system they won't be expecting. I'm
pushing the boundaries on that as hard as I can." He peered into
a viewer. "We're landing about twenty klicks from the port. In
some park. There're a lot of ornamental bushes dotted around.
Grab what you want and as soon as we're down and the ramp drops,
run like hell. The bushes will help to hide which way we go. With
luck the probies will be caught on their heels for a few minutes.
If we move fast enough we can get clear." The ship was sitting on
her tail, descending in a controlled emergency landing and
steering with the small side jets. Ideena leapt across the
control room, grabbing for emergency stashes of her
loot. "We can go to the circus.
Dedran will take us in. If he doesn't and we're probed there's
too much we could tell security about him." Baris showed his teeth. "I
know. Get the other two sets of fake ID. And anything light
that's worth credits." "Teach your grandmother to
suck eggs. You get every weapon we can carry. Dedran may have
other ideas about helping." By now both were stuffing pockets,
shoulder bags, and the front of tunics. The ship's alarm was
announcing that it was thirty seconds to emergency set-down.
Baris hit the drop-ramp button, then, when it refused to obey,
the override. The ramp dropped just as the ship settled. There
was a grating sound as the ramp hit the ground and buckled. Both
ignored it to race for the exit. Ideena fumbled hovercab
tokens from her pocket as they reached a line of the small
robot-controlled vehicles on the far side of the park. Credits
could be used but those who wished to use the cabs extensively
during a visit often bought the tokens. They were in clearplas
and weighed almost nothing. Nor could you spend them by mistake
and find the cab refusing to accept larger amounts in notes.
Thanking fortune she'd still a number of the tokens left, Ideena
dug them from her pocket in readiness. They fell into the
backseat and the door hissed shut. The hovercab spoke in a flat
polite voice. "Where to, noble visitors?" "To the Algona
building." "Two credits." She pushed the token through
the slot and leaned back. Baris started to question her choice of
destination but she waved him to silence. They arrived at the
building. Ideena cleared her throat and stayed put. The cab spoke
again. "This is your destination as
requested. Do you have another?" "Yes. Go to the Sharme
intersection. Wait one half-hour for us. If we do not meet you in
that time you are no longer required." "That will be six credits,
noble visitors." Ideena fed in the last of the tokens and hauled
a bewildered Baris out the door. They watched the hovercab glide
away as Ideena held her partner on the sidewalk. She spoke
quietly. "Those cabs are probably
fitted with cameras. Andresson will be able to trace us here but
not yet. The only way he can speed up getting that cab back is an
emergency recall. And by the time he decides on that the cab's
likely to be at Sharme. I packed disguises. We change here, walk
several miles, and take another hover to Dedran." Baris's look was sour.
"They'll have cameras all over this building too, won't
they?" "Oh, yes." For the first
time since Baris had burst into their ship, Ideena grinned. "I
have an answer for those." She produced two small gadgets from
her bag and turned, staring at the crowd. "I picked this up on
Yohal a while back." She focused her gaze on two people moving
toward them. "That pair look suitable." The pair noticed were a tall
thin male with an equally thin woman by his side. They were rapt
in contemplation of each other and clearly unnoticing anything
else. Ideena raised the first gadget and within it, there was a
tiny humming. She opened it, removed the cassette, and placed it
in the second small flat box. A tiny red light glowed
momentarily. Ideena lifted the box to fit under a strap on her
shoulder. "Walk right beside me. Don't
move away. The machine projects a holographic picture over us of
the two I imaged. So long as we're within a couple of feet of
each other all the cameras will see in here are those two." Baris
eyed her with admiration. Trust Ideena to come up with something
like that, it was one of the reasons he stayed with her,
dominating as she was. He took her arm and walked
with her to the public bathrooms many large public buildings had
on Trastor. There she entered, giggling wordlessly, with him in
tow. She dropped a credit in the slot, dropped a towel over the
camera, and signaled him to remain silent. Mutely she laid out
disguises and they donned them with the quick ease of long
practice. Baris produced a tiny pocket scriber and wrote
swiftly. "Won't they wonder why we
blinded the camera?" In reply she let out a yelp
then a squeal. She opened her mouth and panted in a series of
ascending gasps of apparent excited pleasure. Baris laughed and
joined in. It was the perfect cover. Of course. They were merely
two citizens in love and with no time to waste returning to
wherever they lived. They kept up the pretense for long enough to
be convincing. Then they exited using Ideena's box to foil the
lobby cameras. Once in the street she shut off the box and they
walked... ...No longer Baris and the
Lady Ideena. Now they were an older man with his young son. Even
Ideena's walk had changed, to the cocky swagger of a boy in his
mid-teens. Baris became a more ponderous walker, a man of
substance both financial and physical; an aging man who had never
had to exert himself and whose reflexes had long since slowed.
They took a hovercab in the direction of the circus. Several
streets away they left the cab and strolled, two in a crowd, all
heading for Trastor's newest attraction. There were guards at the
circus gates. Baris slowed. "Do we risk
it?" "No choice," Ideena hissed
back. "We need to get under cover. Take your time. We'll look
around the cages first. With good luck we'll see Dedran or Cregar
without having to ask for them." They strolled, Ideena in
character as a bored boy trying to pretend he was enjoying the
treat his father had offered, Baris as the equally bored father
only too happy that his lad was enjoying the show. From the
corner of his eye Baris saw a familiar figure. His hand tightened
on her arm and she turned casually to follow his
stare. Cregar was checking guard
shields and locks on the cages. There was always some stupid
child left unwatched who'd try to approach the cage front or
sneak in the back to enter and pet the pretty animals. Most of
the pretty animals would be delighted, some because they enjoyed
being petted, others because they could always use an extra
snack. He checked the next lock and held himself from a betraying
movement as he felt someone approaching. A voice spoke very
softly behind him. "Don't turn around. This is
Baris and Ideena. We're wanted. Ideena thinks it's about our raid
on Arzor. Tell Dedran he gets us under cover or the probies have
us and we talk our heads off. He'd better decide fast, they won't
be far behind." Cregar thought quickly.
"Stroll about. I'll find Dedran. We'll slip you into the alley
between cage rows. There're places there we can keep you where
even the probies won't find a thing." He turned, looked at them
briefly, and slid into the crowd. He was back in five minutes
with the worried-looking circus boss. Ten minutes later the
fugitives were lodged undetectably if not comfortably in the
secret part of the largest cage. Cregar and Dedran had talked and
Dedran was both alarmed and furious but he hid his emotions from
the fugitives. There would always be another time to act. For now
he would have to wait and see what sort of a storm this stupid
pair had raised. If it was too dangerous there were always
options. Chapter
Fourteen Inside the circus
Laris heard nothing of the fugitives' arrival until Dedran
sought her out. "The largest hidden place," he snapped at her.
"It has occupants. Take them a jug of the local cider and see
that it's cut with about half juice. I won't risk them getting
drunk." Laris snorted, "They'd find
it impossible to get drunk on that stuff without juice
added. And what if whoever it is blames me?" Dedran's face was grim.
"Tell them it's my order. Don't waste time, girl. Get moving and
come straight back. I want to go over changes in the order of
tonight's acts." He strode away as Laris
headed for the tent which held food and drink for the circus
staff. She half filled a large lidded jug with the local cider
and topped it off with a tart thirst-quenching fruit juice. She
was wondering who Dedran had hidden. Cregar was nearby as she
slipped down the alley behind the cages. He nodded once to her
and went back to his work, which appeared to consist of polishing
cage locks. Laris wondered about that, then thought perhaps he
was checking security and seeing that no one followed her to the
hidden room. She opened the door with
care, climbed in, and placed the jug on a small ledge. It was
darker inside where the bright sun did not penetrate so her
vision was blurred. She spoke quietly to the dim shape which
lounged against the wall. "I have brought you cider
and fruit juice to drink. Dedran says it is by his orders." She
moved to leave and was caught by the arm. A half-familiar female voice
purred softly. "Was it indeed?" A second shape moved up; as
Laris's eyes acclimated to the dimness she stared and bit down
fear. The speaker was Ideena with Baris behind her, and they
looked unpleasantly pleased to see her. "I don't much care for fruit
juice," Baris said softly. "I'd prefer Fever brandy, wouldn't
you, Ideena?" "Much better than fruit
juice," came the sweet agreement. Laris twisted. "Dedran
expects me back at once. He wants to discuss tonight's
acts." "Oh, but we'd rather you got
us brandy. We're even prepared to give you a couple of credits
and you can keep the change." "Dedran—" "Can wait while you go and
buy us what we want." Baris took a firmer grip on her wrist. "Do
you hear me? I want brandy!" His fingers dug into a bruise the
girl had received earlier and Laris squealed at the sharp
pain. Cregar thrust his head in
and scowled. "Never mind wasting time here, girl. Dedran's
expecting you." "Maybe we'd like her to
stay?" Ideena's voice was half-questioning. "And maybe we have work for
her," Cregar said, looking at the woman. "There's an old saying:
Offend not the host in his home." Ideena pouted but nodded to the
man. Baris released his grip sullenly. He reached for the jug,
drank, and spat in outrage. "Fruit juice! Tell Dedran we
want something drinkable. Merilian wine, even the wine they make
here is drinkable. Anything but Ghesh-damned fruit juice. There's
no kick in that for a man." Laris scrambled out of the
cage and left Cregar to discuss that subject. She wanted to be
far away from the fugitive pair. If Cregar hadn't come when he
did she had a feeling Baris would have started slapping her. And
why had he come? How had he been about just when she
needed him? She didn't know. She'd just be grateful he had been,
and she hoped he'd be there if she had to tend that pair again.
Behind her Cregar was speaking very quietly. "Lay off the kid. She
belongs to Dedran. She does a good job for the circus too. She's
in four acts; Dedran won't be at all happy if she can't perform."
His gaze became threatening. "Besides, she's not a bad kid. You
start upsetting her and I might just take a hand. I haven't got a
lot of time for your kind." "Is that supposed to scare
us?" Baris sneered. Cregar said nothing. He simply stood there
holding the man's gaze with his own until the larger man dropped
his eyes. Cregar left. Baris made a
spitting motion, then looked at Ideena. "No one talks to me like
that. There's always another day and next time it'll be my
turn." Ideena was thoughtful. "Yes.
But not yet. First we need to get off this planet. The best way
would be with our ship. I don't want to go back to finding
another and fixing it up. Not if we can get this one back." She
remembered the filthy jobs they'd had to take to afford even the
shabby, decommissioned old patrol courier ship. It wasn't the
killings she'd minded, nor the easier robberies. It was working
for people who'd given the orders and treated her and Baris as if
they were something scraped from a gutter. She didn't want to do all
that again. It was a pity they hadn't had a good chance at Cregar
once they'd lifted from Arzor. But the man was cunning. Maybe now
was a better time. Baris wasn't much for planning but he
sometimes had ideas. She opened the discussion and waited to hear
if this was one of those times. They settled to making plans as
outside Laris was trotting for Dedran's office. He looked up as
she entered. "Where have you
been?" "Baris tried to make me stay
with them." Laris hoped that a few words would convey more. It
seemed to. Dedran's eyes went hard. "What happened?" That was
easy. She explained what the pair had said and done. Then that
Cregar had come by, heard her cry out, and intervened. She
exhibited the bruised wrist. "He stayed?" was Dedran's
question. "I think so. I heard him
talking as I left." Dedran grunted. "Humph. Very
well. I may have to speak to them if Cregar hasn't made it plain
that I hire you to work with the animals. They don't qualify."
Laris giggled and he shot her a look then half-smiled
reluctantly. "They don't qualify as circus animals. Now, tonight
we have some of the local VIPs attending. I want to shift the
carra act..." They got on with work. Later, after the show,
Dedran found his man. "What happened with that pair and the
girl?" Cregar was terse and the language he used was explicit.
His boss frowned. "They're a risk. We may have to do something
about that." "All you have to do is say
the word." "Not yet. That could be a
risk as well. I'll let you know." "Want me to keep an eye on
the kid? If they start anything with her and she screams there
could be some outsider to hear and ask questions. That
Ghesh-damned Anders has the whole city filled with spies. Baris
plays some very unpleasant games I've heard, and anyway, if they
rough the girl up too badly she can't work. She could even run
away if they hurt or scare her too much. You don't want to risk
any of that." Dedran pursed his thin lips.
"No, I don't. All right. Stick around anytime she's with them.
I'll tell her she's to let you know beforehand." He changed the
subject. "What about those beasts? The girl says the small ones
are fine and quite friendly but the other two won't cooperate and
the big one is still very sick." "She's telling the truth.
The meercats are friendly." He felt a warmth as he remembered how
the small group welcomed him. The babies climbing his clothing to
beg for treats and petting, even Hing accepted his physical
touch—if not any mental contact as yet.
"The coyotes eat and drink well. They are in good condition but
they resist bonding very strongly. It will take time but I think
they'll come around in the end." At least he prayed they
would. "And the cat?" "That's a different matter.
If Ideena hadn't shot her it would be a lot easier. As it is the
animal associates me with her pain. Once she's healed further I
may be able to convince her that I am a friend. It all takes
time." Dedran scowled. "I don't
like having them here so long. There are too many snoopers
prying. I'll make arrangements in case anyone does discover
anything I'd prefer they didn't know." He broke off and looked at
Cregar. "Let's just say that there's to be no evidence of any
kind at all if a search gets too close." He walked away, heading for
the main tent and Cregar was left thinking about everything
happening lately. He didn't like any of this. And what had that
last comment meant? The possible disposal of Baris and Ideena
didn't worry him. That Dedran might have the child disposed of if
the authorities pressed too closely behind did bother
him. He suddenly felt an odd need
to protect Laris. She was a good kid, she admired his training of
the circus beasts, and she was good with the animals herself. He
didn't remember clearly why he felt somehow protective of her.
Only that somewhere behind the fog of years, from the
before-time, when he'd had a team who loved him and a place of
his own in society, he'd known a kid like her. On a planet
destroyed by the Xik, he thought. He dismissed his vague,
trauma-blurred memories of the little sister he'd loved when he
had parents and siblings and a world. But Ishan had been
destroyed by the Xik and all he'd known and loved had gone with
his planet. Over her years with the circus Laris had grown more
and more to look like his sister. But Cregar didn't want to
remember all the pain of loss again. He forgot again by an effort
of will, his memories sliding back into the mists in his
head. In the security building
Anders's assistant was speaking quietly into a comunit. He turned
to Tani. "Gracious Lady, it is
requested that you join Larash-Ti-Andresson. I will drive you to
the place where he waits." "The three of us will be
going," Storm said firmly. "Can we assume that after all this,
our quarry escaped?" The assistant flushed unhappily and said
nothing. Storm nodded. "They did. I see. All right. Drive us to
meet Anders." They met a man who under the
mask of quiet competence was fuming. Storm was honestly
interested. "How did they escape?" Anders evaluated the question
and understood the genuine interest. The questioner had been in a
similar business after all. "They had an emergency
override program. When the navcomp was blown by the
scramble-laser the program kicked in. It allowed them to set
their ship down in any open area within a certain distance. That
distance was determined by how high they were when they had to
begin descent again. The program uses a combination of height and
side-jets to give a ship options in case of navcomp
malfunction." "Your people weren't
allowing for the program?" "Someone will be answering
for that. It's a new system and the people I sent out to collect
Baris and Ideena never expected a ship that old to have it
installed." He paused. "In fairness to my people I should say
that I would have thought the program too new and different to
interface well with that ship's older equipment. But if I'd been
out there myself I'd have still taken it into consideration just
in case. They didn't and that gave Baris and Ideena a chance, one
they didn't waste time in taking. We traced them to the street
outside a building in the city. They were not seen entering by
the building's security cameras." "So they've vanished," Storm
said flatly. "For the moment." Anders's
eyes took on a hard gleam. "Just for the moment. The governor has
posted a reward for information. That's not for public
consumption, by the way. We're just filtering it quietly through
a few underworld informants. But every little criminal in the
place will know about the reward by tomorrow. We'll have to sift
through a lot of rubbish but someone who knows something will
get to considering how much they know—and what it's worth. Then they'll
make a call." Tani looked up at him. "What
if the someone hiding them is in as deep or deeper? What if
they're the ones who hired those two from the start? They aren't
going to come running to sell them to you. They'd be selling
themselves at the same time." She received a look of
respect. "That's true. But there are always people who know small
pieces of information and who aren't really involved. They'll
talk, collect the reward, and immunity from prosecution for
whatever minor crimes are on what passes for their conscience."
He straightened, hands massaging the small of his back. "Don't
worry. Baris and Ideena will turn up." He strolled ahead making
for the hovercar, missing Storm's last comment to Tani and
Logan. "I'm sure they will. I'm
just not as sure as he is that they'll be in one piece." From the
looks of agreement the other two felt the same. Anders wasn't as sure as
he'd seemed. In reality he had thought of that himself. But he'd
seen the full file on the fugitives. They'd been involved in much
more than was apparent from their list of actual charges. In a
secondary file there were pages of supposition and suspicion.
Brightland alone suspected Baris and Ideena of involvement in
everything from a couple of clever assassinations to several
brutal robberies in which every possible witness had been
eliminated. It made it likely the pair
could take care of themselves. Then, too, they could be valuable
still to those who'd hired them. Anders thought that Ideena would
be keeping a wary eye on those employers anyway. She'd know that
often employees who became a risk were quietly deleted from the
equation. She'd be watching for any hint that was planned. He
thought that Ideena and her partner would turn up alive
eventually. It was just a question of when—and where. So he partly discounted the
chance her employers would dispose of the two. Ideena would be
alert and she'd keep the man alert too. The pair would most
likely stay low, seeking a chance to get their ship back and get
off-planet. He'd put a cordon about the ship to deal with one
part of that. He'd pick them up if they appeared. For the other possibility,
that they might elude his men, he'd had the ship rendered
inoperable. It would appear to be working, but there was a stop
on the engines. Even if Baris produced a spare navcomp and had
the undisturbed hours needed to replace the ship's system, the
vessel would stay right where it was. And the street-smart were
talking. Anders had spies and contacts who owed him favors in
many areas of the local crime network. Already word would be
spreading. He had a two-pronged attack there as well. Firstly
there was the reward. It was generous but with it went word that
Anders would not appreciate his time being wasted for nothing. To
help that along he had a section of his people rousting every
game in town. Each time it was carefully
explained that they were searching for Baris and the Lady Ideena.
Once they were found, this poking into every corner could stop.
Anders gave a hard grin. His efforts were infuriating half the
big criminal groups in the city. Once they were annoyed enough
they'd start doing his work. After that Ideena and her man were
as good as in an interrogation cell. At the circus Baris and
Ideena certainly felt as if they were prisoners. The hidden
portion of the animal cage was barely six feet wide and ten long.
It held two very narrow bunks along the far end from the
entrance. There was no entertainment but themselves so they spent
much of the time eating, sleeping, quarreling, and drinking. None
of it was completely satisfactory. The food was usually lukewarm
and bland. Dedran would give them only weakened cider. And with
the narrow bunks sleeping was not as comfortable as
usual. The quarreling was
dangerous. They allowed themselves to do so only when the
alternative would have been a physical attack. Neither wanted to
risk that. Not on each other or on those who, for the moment,
sheltered them. But Ideena knew her partner was becoming
uncontrollable. Baris had never reacted well to imprisonment. The
few times he'd spent short periods in jail he'd had to be sedated
much of the time. She'd timed the visits made to them with food
and the longer periods when they were left alone. Now she
spoke. "Let's get out." Baris stared. "I thought it
was too dangerous?" "Staying here while we both
go crazy is just as bad. If we disguise ourselves as father and
son again we could have a while outside this rat hole. Dedran
doesn't have to know." Baris was scrambling into
his outfit before she'd finished speaking. Once Ideena was ready
they drifted out of the cage alley and joined the crowd flowing
along past the sideshows. They stayed out several hours,
returning more relaxed to sleep well. After that they risked it
again. Then again. But apart from that, Baris
wanted a decent drink. He'd have angrily refuted the idea that he
was an alcoholic, and he never got really drunk, but he did like
something strong and the fruit-juice-weakened cider which was all
Dedran allowed them just wasn't enough to keep Baris happy. If he
got his hands on that girl when no one was around he was sure he
could scare her into finding him something decent to
drink. He hadn't seen Cregar and
had no idea that the ex-beast master was watching any time the
girl slipped away to take supplies to the fugitives. Cregar had
seen them out however, and recognized them despite the disguises.
He knew the risks they took. He was holding the information. If
he had to stir Dedran to a decision he'd have the
spur. Baris lounged on the lower
bunk. He heard the tiny click that was the latch and moved like
lightning. Laris entered and his hands closed on her. One over
her mouth, the other clamping her wrists together. But his victim
hadn't grown up in the camps for nothing. Cregar would be
waiting. Her heel slammed out. Not against Baris but against the
door which was still ajar. It crashed open. She kicked again through the
opening. Cregar would see that and know she was fighting. Baris's
hand gripped her wrists as he tried to kick the door shut again.
From around the girl's neck a chain fell to dangle her ring
against the rough tunic. Her attacker's eyes widened. "Well, well. So that's who
got this. Ideena, take a look. I guess I get a drink if I want
one now." He swung Laris toward the watching woman. Cregar
entered just as Ideena rose to her feet. She took one look at his
face and sat again. Ideena knew when to back up. "Let her go, Baris." Cregar
looked bland and uninvolved until one saw his eyes. Baris wasn't
looking. "I do what I want an' right
now I want a drink." Cregar wasn't arguing. He
placed a palm-sized needier against the man's neck and triggered.
Baris slid heavily to the floor, eyes shut, body limp. Laris
landed half under him with a gasp as his weight drove the air
from her lungs. Ideena remained sitting as Cregar looked at
her. "Nothing to do with me," she
said. He nodded acceptance of that as she continued. "If it was
I'd mention a ring the girl has and I'd remember where it came
from. Dedran won't hear about the ring if he doesn't hear about
this." It was Cregar's turn to nod. "Soldier's oath?" He nodded
again and Ideena relaxed. She'd never kept her word in her life
if there was profit in breaking it. But she knew that those who'd
been in the service prided themselves otherwise. Cregar lifted the tousled
Laris and helped her from the hidden room. She could stand,
bruised and scared though she was. He surveyed her once they were
safely outside. "Did he hurt
you?" "Just bruises; he'd have hit
me if you hadn't gotten there, though." The look she turned on
him was honest gratitude and a deep admiration and it warmed him.
He reached for the ring and dropped it back on the chain down her
tunic neck. His hand patted her shoulder. "Long as you're okay."
Something stirred in Laris. Without thinking she turned her head
to the side and, in a gesture old as the camps, kissed the hand
which held her. "Thanks to you. I won't
forget. Camp oath on that." She shook herself. "I'd better
get going." She accepted the light push he gave her,
grinned at him, and hurried away. Cregar stood considering the
past ten minutes. He'd sworn not to mention Baris and his actions
just now. He hadn't sworn not to tell Dedran a few other things
his boss didn't know as yet. Such as that pair's habit of running
about the circus in disguise, and maybe bringing the peacekeepers
down on the circus. Cregar would wait just a little longer and he
had no doubt that the pair of fools would stray so far over the
line Dedran would have no choice but to eliminate the dangers
they posed to his plans. After her escape from Baris
and Ideena, Laris worked busily, trying to smooth from her mind
the few moments of fear. The circus with its people was becoming
dangerously unstable. If things continued that way she might have
to run. Trastor wasn't a bad world on which to get out. Their
bond-laws were easier than those on some of the other worlds. She
could prove she'd been illegally bonded. She had enough to pay
her way for two years with the credits Prauo had brought her and
the cat's-eye the Quades had permitted her to keep. Better yet, she could no
doubt find a trade to learn here in the city and buy in on an
apprenticeship for a year. Depending on the work she chose, her
time of service would be from three to seven years. But after
that she'd have a trade and a guild. Maybe she could find
something where her liking for animals would serve her. There was
also Prauo to consider. Laris felt his attention. *I
wondered where I fitted in, furless-sister.* *You always
will.* *That is good. As for the
ones whose minds I do not like.* There was the sound in her head
which was his laughter. *I think they will be dealt with soon
enough. Too many have plans for them. They will not elude all.
You do well. Continue to play the men, one against the
other.* He was gone again. Laris
worried as she swept. She didn't want to go near Baris and Ideena
even once more. And Dedran would expect her to continue. He knew
nothing about Baris. Cregar wouldn't spill. He'd oathed. She
thought wistfully of Logan, and of riding over the vast acres of
the Quade ranch. If only she wasn't trapped here, if only she and
Prauo could be free. She'd like to see more of Logan if only she
didn't have his beasts on her conscience. Her thoughts wandered
back to the humans concealed in the secret section of the cage.
Cregar would keep an eye on her when she went there again, she
hoped. He liked her and he didn't like Baris and
Ideena—or Dedran. She liked him too,
although it was a pity he'd ever gotten involved with the circus.
She didn't think he was happy here. It was good for her that he
was here though. Cregar was thinking about
the same thing. Sure, the circus had given him a place. But maybe
it was time to get out. Cregar knew Dedran's boss; the man was a
Thieves Guild patron and in the guild there were factions. Nhara
was likely to be hard-pressed to hold his patron status with an
expensive plan which had yielded nothing so far. If Nhara went
down so did Dedran—and the circus. Very possibly any
of the staff the guild thought might know too much would also
vanish. That definitely included Cregar. He saw a familiar face
approaching and hid the startled feeling which shot through him.
What was the boy doing here? Ideena had shot Logan, the circus
held the beasts taken from the family; could the lad be looking
for any of them here? At the least it wasn't a good omen that the
boy suddenly appeared. More than ever he felt it might be time to
get away from the circus. He kept his face bland as he nodded
politely. "If you're looking for Laris, she's grooming the
tigerbats." Logan grinned cheerfully.
"Thanks. What's the season been like here so far?" "Good. Real good. How is it
that you're here on Trastor?" "Oh, my brother and his wife
had business here and I came along for the ride." Cregar liked the sound of
that even less. It was possible the business mentioned was the
recovery of their animals; or had Baris and Ideena left some sort
of a trail to the circus? He allowed his gaze to drift over the
lad. A decent boy. Good family background, money, land, and
animals. The girl could go farther and fare much worse. "You want
to take off with her a couple of hours, tell her I said I'd do
the work." A hint of red showed across
the boy's cheekbones. "I will, and thanks." Cregar nodded and
turned away as if it was nothing. Once the boy was out of sight
Cregar headed in another direction. Dedran should know the boy
and his family were on Trastor. Logan paced slowly along the
cage rows looking for the tigerbat cage. He'd told Storm and Tani
where he was going and they'd agreed. "Brad did say to tell the
girl her name and ask about the animals," Storm had commented.
"Stars know Anders hasn't found out anything. You may as well see
if there's anything to be found out about the origins of those
tigerbats." Tani had smiled gently.
"Tell Laris her full name and that Brad's still looking. Storm
and I will come by later on maybe." Logan left. The hovercab
delivered him to the circus lines in a matter of minutes and then
he had only to find Laris." He saw her first and felt quick
pleasure. She didn't know they were on Trastor. She'd be
delighted. *Sister!* Laris felt Prauo's
alarm. *The ring. Hide it, now. Quickly!* She obeyed at once.
Seconds later she heard the voice. "Laris, it's Logan. Hi!" She
turned in sudden shock, thanking Prauo as she did so. Logan
mustn't see the ring. He mustn't know. Her mind whirled as she
smiled a shy, half-guilty welcome. What was he doing here? Did he
know Storm and Tani's beasts were here? Why had he
come? Chapter
Fifteen Laris was suddenly and
strongly aware of the ring down her tunic, the bright sunshine,
and Logan's happy grin. They jumbled together in her mind in a
wash of joy and guilt. She couldn't even return the ring. The
circus had left well before the attack on the native camp and
Quade ranch. If she tried to give the ring back Logan would know
she knew who'd attacked him and stolen the beasts. He'd never
forgive her. At the same time she knew she was smiling at Logan.
Pleased to see him and showing it. "Logan, what are you doing
here?" "I came with Tani and
Storm." His grin left slowly as he told her much of what she
already knew—and wished very hard that she
didn't—of the raids on the Nitra clan and
the High Peaks ranch house. Of his injuries and the kidnapping of
Surra, Hing, and her babies. The loss of Tani's
coyotes. "The authorities think that
there's someone killing beast masters and stealing their teams
for some reason." He looked really serious by now. "I suppose it
could be some new Xik idea. Storm doesn't think so though, nor
does Brad; that's why we're here, to talk to the authorities.
They'll listen to Tani on Trastor." He skipped the reasons the
authorities were listening, no need to go into the whole tale of
Tani's father. He brightened. "I met a man
on the way in." He described Cregar and Laris nodded. "Cregar. He's a sort of
second-in-command for Dedran when he's here." Oh gods, she
shouldn't have said that. If Logan thought that Cregar was away
from the circus sometimes he might wonder what the man was
doing. Logan wasn't even thinking
of that. He had another idea. "So he's got some authority here?
Good, because he said if you want to take off with me for a
couple of hours, he'll cover your work. I've got something to
tell you." Laris considered fast,
putting aside her guilt at her part in the recent events. Cregar
was caring for the meercats and coyotes alone now—at his insistence. Laris still
looked after Surra. If anyone else attempted that the animal
promptly became worse. Guilt and sorrow at Surra's pain were
eating at the girl but she dared not act. Not yet. As for what Logan was saying
it sounded as if the raid on Arzor was continuing to stir up too
much interest. Dedran would want to know all about it. She could
use that as an excuse. Feed Dedran small harmless bits of
information while she spent as much time with Logan as she could.
The thought made her happy. Then her feelings plummeted again.
His requests for her company would last only so long as he didn't
know she was involved. But she could be happy with him until he
did find out. "Well, if Cregar said so.
That's kind of him. I'll just go to my cabin and put something
clean on. Wait for me here, Logan. I won't take long." She had to
get the ring stowed away. It wouldn't do to take it with her and
have something happen. She changed in a flurry with Prauo eyeing
her from the bunk, purple eyes amused. *Take care,
sister-without-fur. I shall watch what happens here for you, and
listen also. You are wise to do this.* Laris was surprised at the
last. *Wise, why?* For a minute he said
nothing, then, *Learn all you can. Dedran plans, Cregar also. And
the two whose minds taste of evil. All plan. Yet it may be what
you say and do that is the pivot on which all things hang. The
currents of what-is move; ride them and live; let them crash over
you and die. They do not know this. I do and I can see.* Laris
wasn't sure she'd understood some of that but there wasn't time
to discuss Prauo's words. It half made sense and she'd go with
that half. *A11 right. I'll learn all I
can. You stay at the back of my mind and hear it. Tell me if I
should do anything. I've got to go or Logan will get tired of
waiting.* The big cat yawned, fangs
closing with a sharp snick. *That could be true—if he waited many hours. Since it
is you for whom he waits, he is only impatient to see you again.*
His eyes shut and he relaxed, then opened one eye. *Go, or do you
dream of mating, go.* Laris blushed and went hastily. Logan was admiring the
tigerbats. He took her hand when she arrived. "It's so great to
see you again. Tell me about this bunch. You work with them,
don't you? How hard are they to train?" She talked tigerbats. Logan
was easy to talk to. He knew animals and liked them. Understood
some of the ways in which they thought. She found herself telling
him again how she wished Skreel, the lead tigerbat, and his tiny
swarm could be free. Logan looked at her. "Have you ever wondered
about the last couple that arrived? Lereyne found out that
tigerbats were almost extinct about five years ago. Since then
they've put aside a special reserve for them. Dad says that it's
been illegal to export them from Lereyne since then." "But Dedran got ours just
over two years ago." Laris was thoughtful. "Of course, other
worlds have them in zoos. He never said where this pair came
from. And some rich VIPs keep them to show off." She looked at
the tigerbats. "If they were stolen from their home, Logan,
that's awful." "There's a way to
know." "How?" "If you took samples Tani's
aunt and uncle could check. You know they run the ark. All they
have to do is match DNA with the existing gene pool on Lereyne.
That'd tell them if the tigerbats were from there." Laris wrinkled her brow.
"But aren't all tigerbats related? Wouldn't the samples just
match anyway?" "Nope. Brad checked. It's
been five years since tigerbats could be legally exported. But
they were getting rare for years before that. Lereyne looked up
the records. The last permit was almost seventeen years before
that. They can run the DNA matches right down to recent
generations. If your two show DNA that matches, then they came
from Lereyne in their lifetime. I can't explain it all to you.
Just take my word for it." His fingers tightened on her
hand. "I do, I am." Laris was
flustered. "What do you want me to do, just take samples and get
them to you?" "Yes. I promise we won't
make trouble for you." His tone became edged. "I'm sure Dedran
will have an innocent explanation of how he came by them." Laris
was sure of that too. "But if they were stolen from Lereyne,
they'll be confiscated and returned. You'd like that for
them?" Laris had no doubts about
that answer. "Yes. I would. I just wish they could all go back.
They aren't happy in cages. They aren't like the carra or the
dogs. They really love this life. The tigerbats
don't." "Then help us find
out." She nodded slowly. "All
right. When?" He swung her to face him, a
broad smile on his face. "How long can you spend with
me?" "Cregar said a couple of
hours. Anyhow I'd have to be back in plenty of time for the next
performance. Why?" "We'll go to the park and
have something to eat. Then, when we come back if you think it's
safe you can get the samples and I can leave with
them." By the time they returned,
Laris thought, the other circus people would be busy getting
ready for the ring. Dedran would be busiest of all. No one was
likely to question what she did. But she mustn't let Logan know
how often she took samples. She let him tell her how to do the
job and provide the slides as he led her toward the park. At the
far side of the green area were benches. They settled there, eyes
on each other as they talked. Laris felt happy all over when he
reached for her hand. His gaze on her was gentle,
almost—she was afraid to believe what her
heart told her—perhaps his gaze was loving, yet
that could be wishful thinking. They strolled a while, her
hand still clasped in his. Laris had never felt so contented, but
her joy was tinged with a bitter guilt—if Logan knew what she'd done he
would hate her. In that hour she alternated between happiness,
fear, and rage that she had been swept up in Dedran's schemes.
Finally they returned to sit at the small cafe, ordering food and
drink. "Finish that bun and
listen." Logan leaned forward. "Brad was able to get your records
as far back as the camp on Meril. All he's got so far is your
full name. No trace of your mother. You were alone on Meril. But
we've got that far." He saw her face fall. "Brad says it all
takes time but he's sure he can trace you farther back." He
grinned teasingly. "Don't you want to know your name?" Her face told him the
answer. "Okay. You are Shallaris Trehannan. Brad looked that up
too. Where the Shallaris came from, we don't know. But Brad says
that Trehannan is a very old Terran name. When he found that he
read an old rhyme to us. It goes, 'Tre, Pol, and Pen are the
Cornish men.' " "What does that
mean?" "Cornwall was part of the
British Isles. It was one of the oldest lands settled there. Many
Cornish families had prefixes in their names like that. It means
that if you hear a name with Tre, Pol, or Pen at the beginning
the family most likely came from this Cornwall." "Trehannan!" Laris tasted
the feeling. She had a name. A place of origin. She was Shallaris
Trehannan and her family had come originally from Cornwall on
Terra. Maybe not in her generation, but once. Her face lit with a
smile of pure uncomplicated joy, and Logan caught his breath. It
was wonderful to know he'd made her that happy. He saw a shadow
slide over the delight. "What is it?" If Brad had
found out that much, Laris knew, he must also know what she'd
hidden and Dedran had lied about. She was a bond-servant, not
Dedran's ward. She summoned resolution. "I'm ... Dedran bonded me,"
she blurted. Logan smiled gently. "I know. He lied. Brad says
you weren't of legal age either. You could get the bond revoked.
We'd help if you wanted that. Tani has a special status here.
She'd talk to the governor for you. Trastor has bond laws and
Dedran's broken just about all of them." She sat thinking. They'd
help. Would they still help her if they knew the rest of it? And
what about the samples? What would happen to all of the animals
if Dedran was discredited? If he was ruined because of her, he'd
talk. About her, about the thefts she'd carried out at his order.
How understanding would the authorities be over those? And what
if Dedran insisted on claiming Prauo? A tickle in the back of her
head. *Tell him you'd rather wait until you can be sure the
tigerbats are safe. He'll understand that.* Laris reached out to take
Logan's hand. "I know Dedran broke laws, but he hasn't abused
me." She grinned wryly. "Well, just cuffs, a beating, and a crack
of the whip now and again. He's fed me decently though, and I've
been respectably clothed. It was my only way out of the camp. I
don't like Dedran." The look in her eyes said that statement was
milder than the truth. "Still, if I'm here until we know about
Skreel, my lead tigerbat, and his swarm, I can make sure they
stay put. That Dedran doesn't have them spirited away or
killed." "That's sensible so long as
it isn't too hard on you." "I'll manage," Laris assured
him briefly. "Then, Shallaris Trehannan,
shall we walk?" He stood as she giggled at the
alliteration. "Why, we shall lope, Logan."
She ran for the park's broad acres of grass, laughing as he
chased her. She danced. "Can't catch me!" The words ended in a
squeak as he caught her arm and spun her into his arms. His lips
touched hers with a tenderness that was pain. He wouldn't do that
if he knew the truth. He wouldn't hold her like that. As if she
would break. *Live for today, sister.
Tomorrow may change all things.* She gave her lips to Logan then,
praying that it would. They returned to the circus.
Content to walk holding hands. Everyone was busy as they'd hoped
and Laris drifted them along unobtrusively in the direction of
the cages. Once there, she took the slides held out to her, and
the small needle. She listened solemnly a second time to the
muttered instructions before she took the samples, then stowed
them away carefully for him in a bag. Laris watched him leave,
with what was by now an almost familiar mixture of joy and guilt,
before going in search of Cregar. Quietly she told him what she'd
learned. Her eyes on him showed trust and he answered that with a
warning hand on her arm. "Don't tell Dedran about
their theories. Nothing about dead beast masters and stolen teams
and a conspiracy. Let him think they believe it's a one-off. Just
a pirate raid and that they took the animals to sell to rich
VIPs. Don't say any more on that. Not yet. Say you're getting the
boy to talk but it's taking time." His look was thoughtful as he
considered her information. "Tell him everything the lad
said about his side of the raid. Especially that he can identify
Baris and Ideena. Tell him about Tani's father, the hero of
Trastor. That the government will listen to her and they've got
the ports sealed up. That the patrol's interested because of the
attack on the native camp and the theft of sacred jewelry." Laris
nodded obediently. *Prauo?* *He speaks with honesty and
care for you. I read that there is danger and he fears what may
happen. What that may be I cannot read. Listen and agree.* Laris
nodded at Cregar as he spoke, his face earnest. "You mean I should emphasize
how dangerous it could be having Baris and Ideena
here?" "Exactly but be subtle. Then
leave it to me. Just try to let me know when you're telling
Dedran all this." She considered. "He'll know
where I've been already. Once the evening performance is done
he'll want to see me. If you keep an eye out you could go in once
I leave." "Good girl. I'll do that.
You take care." He moved then swung back. "If Dedran ever thinks
the peacekeepers are after him, if they come here, you stay away
from the cages. Particularly the ones with the hidden sections.
Hear me. That's a true warning. I'm not saying more so don't ask.
But you and your cat stay away." He strode off before she
could ask questions. He'd asked his own after that comment of
Dedran's. He'd found answers he didn't like. The circus boss was
ruthless, Cregar had always known that. What Dedran had done made
sense in that way. But Cregar didn't have to like it. He sighed
as he walked. A man did stupid things. Then he got in deeper and
deeper. Until he'd dug himself into a hole too deep to climb out
of. So far the kid wasn't in any
holes, Cregar thought. She was straight. That wouldn't last. He
knew Dedran was using her and that big cat of hers for
burglaries. A bond-servant couldn't be punished if she testified
under probe she'd been in fear of her life or safety, or the life
or safety of another. But how long before Laris succumbed to the
lure of money, if only for the funds to escape? He'd seen it
before. As for Baris, his smile was savage. Let Dedran hear the
kid, then Cregar would tell him a few things. After that there'd
be no more worries about Baris and Ideena. He strode in the direction
of the circus mess tent. He'd help things along with a nice jug
of something for Baris to drink. He drew half a jug of the cider
then added, not the innocuous fruit juice, but Fever brandy. A
wicked mixture which would prime Baris well. With that inside him
the big man would be mad to don a disguise and get out into the
midway. When half drunk, Baris always looked for a woman other
than Ideena. Cregar would watch to know when he went out. He
looked grimly across to where the circus boss's tent stood.
Everyone had plans, not just Dedran. Tani was one of those who
certainly had plans. She grilled Logan about what Laris had said
about the tigerbats, collected the tigerbat samples, and saw
preliminary testing begun on them. Matching the samples fully
would take much longer than the basic tests, but with that begun
she could speak to Aunt Kady. "Send the second set of
samples now," Kady advised. "Not to the ark, send them to
Lereyne. See if the patrol has a ship going from Trastor sometime
soon." "Should I send any notes
with the results?" "No. I'll do that. I'll talk
to a friend." She reeled off a name and address. "He's involved
in the prevention of endangered species smuggling. I'll see to it
that if the results match tiger-bat DNA held on Lereyne, he'll
talk to me before he moves on the information." Storm, with a wider
knowledge of how far evil would go to be safe, interrupted. "Make
very sure of that, Kady. If samples indicate the beasts were
stolen or smuggled and your friend goes in to get the animals too
openly, the owner is likely to destroy the beasts so there's no
proof against him." "Officer Tarwyn will know
that." Kady's lips quirked on the com screen. "It's hardly the
first raid he'll have led over illegal animals." "Better check footing than
fall." Kady chuckled. "So true.
Love to you, Tani. Take care. And you too, Storm." Her voice and
image faded into the static of the starlanes. Storm considered
the samples and the basic results which had just
arrived. "I'll duplicate copies of
these results and split the samples. I'll send our original
results and half the samples to Lereyne, hold the other samples,
and a copy of the results here. That way we have backup if we
need it." He glanced at Logan. "I think you should spend as much
time with Laris as you can. If those tigerbats are illegal, we
don't know what else the owner could be doing. If things get
nasty it would help if you were there to get her and Prauo
out quickly." "If you think so." Logan
kept the exultation from his face with an effort. "I do. Don't you,
Tani?" She nodded. Logan glanced at
the chrono on the wall. "Then I'll go and see the afternoon
performance tomorrow." He left so quickly it was more of a
controlled run. His brother and Tani grinned at each
other. "Were we like
that?" Storm shook his head. "No,
but then we met over Mandy. The first thing I heard from the pair
of you was rude." Tani laughed. She remembered that. Her paraowl
had been taught—by a disaffected worker on the
ark—a number of rude phrases in
several languages with a common word for each as the trigger.
Storm had inadvertently spoken the trigger word and embarrassed
Tani to blushing fury. She'd blamed him. But not long after that
Arzor had been in danger, and they'd learned to work together to
save the planet she'd come to love. But there'd been no time for
walking in the park holding hands. She sobered. "I think I
preferred it our way. By the time we had leisure to talk we both
knew what we wanted." Storm hugged her. "I still
know, dearling," he said, using his word for her which had become
their own. "And if Logan is away tomorrow we can spend time by
ourselves. Unless Anders has something urgent in mind. But it
isn't likely he'll be laying hands on Baris and Ideena that
soon." For which mercy those named
were grateful. They were not so happy about everything else.
Still, life was improving fractionally, Baris thought. Their tiny
quarters were quiet while the evening performance was on. Just as
it became quieter he'd thought he heard a tap at the door. He
checked the spy hole. No one. But by the door stood a lidded jug.
It had probably been the girl. She wasn't risking coming near him
just now. Baris slid the door open a little, grabbed the jug, and
flicked the door shut. "What is it?" "Just fruit juice," he
assured Ideena. He gulped a large mouthful and swallowed as he
turned away. Unseen by his companion his face turned pink and his
eyes bulged as the liquid seared its way down. Baris opened his
mouth to correct his words and shut it again. Why tell Ideena?
She'd only keep him from drinking too much of it. And after all
this time shut up with her a man needed a bit of amusement. This
stuff was good! He gulped again and smiled. Very
good! Ideena ignored him and
drifted back into a doze. Quietly Baris got drunk. For two people
the jug would have left both happy and somewhat dizzy. Perhaps
inclined to sing. But Baris wasn't a peaceful or pleasant drunk,
he was drinking alone, and several liters of the mixture inspired
him not to sing but to find either a woman or a good
brawl. He drifted off into a
brandy-fueled daze for a while. He'd had most of the jug. He
surfaced again an hour after the performance in the ring ended
and the people returning past his room woke him. Good. If people
were about he could don a disguise and get out for a while. He
dressed carelessly. He still looked like the ponderous,
respectable, middle-aged man he had before, except that the man
was now drunk, and contentious with it. He crept out quietly
after finishing the last few gulps in the jug. That he took with
him. Maybe he could refill it somewhere. Laris finished her turns in
the ring, then changed and settled the animals back into their
show cages. Afterward she waited where Dedran could see her. He
appeared at the entrance to his tent and waved her
over. "What did the boy have to
say?" He finished shutting the entrance as he stared at
her. "He talked about the raid on
the native camp. Then the one on their ranch," Laris told him.
She elaborated and once she reached the identification of Baris
and Ideena she saw his lips tighten. His eyes glittered with
fury. She explained how Trastor's authorities, normally so
reluctant to help with another world's problems, were listening
to Tani and just why that was so. It became unpleasantly clear
to Dedran that instead of this fuss soon dying down, it would
continue, probably even escalate. Discovery of Baris and Ideena
hiding in the circus could ruin him, and possibly ruin his patron
in the guild. And if even the slightest breath of trouble touched
Nhara, Dedran would pay. He'd contacted Nhara about the men who'd
posed as security, and had it confirmed that there was
in-fighting among the guild patrons. Dedran was on a knife-edge
now and he knew it. He hesitated. Laris finished her
story. "Do I keep seeing Logan? At
least he's in touch with what Larash-Ti is doing and Logan tells
me everything he hears." She pasted a bored expression on her
face and hoped. "Yes, see him as you can and
work allows." Dedran had other things on his mind. He unlocked
the entrance and stood aside for her to leave. Laris went, as
quickly as would not be too obvious. She passed Cregar as he
approached. He hissed softly in slurring camp dialect in case
there were bugs or Dedran's spies were listening
unseen. "You'm say wha' we
agree?" "Es. N' more." "Done good, girl." He
entered the tent and the entrance closed again. Laris didn't wait
around. Dedran's tent looked flimsy but it was made of an
impervoplas which was nonflamable, soundproof, and had a few
other advantages. Inside Cregar was talking slowly, building up
to telling Dedran that his dangerous guests, far from being well
under cover, were often abroad around the circus. "You're sure of that?"
Dedran was almost incredulous. He'd believe a lot of Baris but
Ideena surely couldn't be that much of an idiot. But listening,
it was certain she had been. "I wasn't certain at first.
They disguise themselves well. Then I spotted Baris in that
pompous merchant outfit of his. When he went out again I had a
word with several circus people. They remembered seeing the
merchant a number of times." He halted with a definite air of
having said all he needed. Dedran wavered. It wasn't that he
minded killing, but could he risk it? Ideena was clever. It might
not be easy to dispose of her without a fuss, especially with
Anders's spies everywhere. "I'll have to deal with it."
He could speak to Ideena. "I'll go there..." he began when a
small urgent voice began calling at the door. He ripped it open
and grabbed. Laris catapulted in already in
midsentence. "Baris is out. He's in the
midway. He's drunk. Any minute now he'll make a scene grabbing
some girl. Quick, do something!" Cregar understood before
Dedran did, but then he'd supplied the ingredients for the
trouble. He nodded. "Baris! I knew that pair
were trouble. Dedran, you deal with Ideena. There's no choice.
She won't listen if Baris vanishes. I'll see to that drunken
fool. Laris, show me where." They were gone, leaving Dedran to
spin momentarily. If Ideena hadn't stopped
Baris going out alone it suggested she'd been sleeping. She
wouldn't know the man was causing trouble. And if she didn't
know, she wouldn't be expecting trouble herself. Dedran raced for
the ship. In a cupboard there he had a number of interesting and
unusual items and he knew one which would be useful
now. On the midway Baris was
stumbling along. After telling her bond-master about Logan, Laris
had gone to Surra to tend the big cat and make her comfortable.
She stroked fur grown rough with illness, repeating her promise.
She would help, find Storm, free Surra, but not yet. Soon, she
was sure. She sat stroking as she considered ways. Perhaps if she
could get Surra away somehow, the way she'd arrived, in one of
the lifter pallets. Or maybe she could send Storm and Tani an
anonymous message. But would they be satisfied
with getting Surra back? Wouldn't it just make them look harder
for the other missing team members? She knew how she'd feel if
Prauo went missing. She'd do anything to get him back. She
wouldn't be in a rush to forgive someone who had stolen him,
either. It wasn't as if she'd be returning Surra in mint
condition. With a final stroke of the
cat's fur she rose and slipped from the hidden room. It was then
she spied the familiar figure of Baris and fled for help. She
pointed him out to Cregar after that and hastily retired to her
own room with Prauo. The big male feline couldn't see anyone if
Laris wasn't looking at them but he could read feelings.
Particularly those of people either of them knew. It was how he'd
warned her of Logan approaching. Laris lay full length on her
bed, Prauo sprawled beside her, her hand on his shoulder as she
received his impressions. Prauo touched the minds of Cregar and
Baris, felt their emotions, and shared them wordlessly with
her. *Waves of giddy lust;
indignation; a feeling that walls closed in on him,* Baris
reeled. *Taste of Cregar, old pain,
new anger. Dislike focused on another. A thread of fear for the
animals.* Baris again. *Recognition.
Amusement. A surge of patronage. A lesser one
approaches. *A hard-edged anger replied.
A tinge of red. Pleasure. At last. No more pretense. A fractional
flash of a girl who looked a little like Laris.* Baris stumbling. *Odd. World
whirling. Legs folding. Blackness.* Prauo spoke in her head.
*The bad one is no more.* Laris knew it for the truth.
She could only hope Dedran knew what he was doing if Cregar had
killed at his order. If the body was found ... no, it would be
bodies. Dedran disliked loose ends. Ideena would be gone as well.
She curled up in her bed and slept. Tomorrow she'd check, very
carefully. Dedran and Cregar had no
time to sleep. The idea for the untraceable disposal of the
bodies was the circus boss's plan, but he required help. He'd
have preferred to use the ship's engine turntable. But the
engines were stopped for overhaul, seeing as the circus was
staying several weeks on Trastor. If he started them again in the
middle of the night, some snooper might ask questions. This other
method would work. It had worked more than once before according
to his sources. It should work again. And so it would have, but
for a technical hitch. Chapter
Sixteen If Larash-Ti-Andresson had
not been happy about the disappearance of Baris and Ideena, their
reappearance left him speechless—for all of ten seconds. After that
what he had to say should have melted his plasteel building to
the foundations. Then he was a whirlwind of action. Demands for
specialist reports propagated like Terran rabbits. Storm and Tani arrived just
as the explosion was dying. Reports had begun to arrive. Anders
read them and exploded all over again. His visitors listened
until the fury had blown itself out. Then Storm asked questions.
"How did it happen, and where were they found?" Anders snarled. "Ideena was
poisoned. Baris was stabbed with a long and very thin blade. I
doubt he even knew it. Here, look at this report." He dropped a
hard copy before Storm and Tani, then continued talking. "The
worst of it is that I suspect this method's been used to dispose
of unwanted people before." Tani raised her gaze from
the report. "How did it go wrong this time?" "Someone will be furious
about that," Anders said grimly. "It was outside the murderer's
control." "Anders, what happened?"
Storm had finished reading the preliminary reports. "Trastor has a couple of
moons as you know. There's a large mining dome on one and a
smaller group on the other. Since they're so close it pays not to
use the expensive type of ship. But we have to run a regular
service. When the mines were opened we had several small,
old-fashioned ships mothballed. We reactivated those. They leave
every fifth day from a small separate port." Anders gave a small snort of
amusement. "That was what wrecked things. The ships are really
old. They use the matter drive. In other words, at a pinch they
can burn anything for fuel." Tani smiled. "They may be
old fashioned but there's still plenty about. The circus you have
here uses a huge old freighter of that sort. And the ark has
those engines. They're workhorses. No speed but a wide and
low-cost range because they can use almost anything at all for
fuel." "Exactly. And they can cost
little to run if they're being used for such short hops. So
that's why we went back to them for the mines. Normally they're
run on compressed fuel bricks. But some bright theorist suggested
we combine operations. She purchased a compactor and is paid to
collect unwanted garbage. That's compressed into bricks and sold
to the mining company at a minimal price." He grunted. "Bright lady.
She makes her money coming and going. Not a lot at each end, but
it's a cheap operation and the two amounts combine to make good
credits. The system is run by her family. Her, a brother, and
their older kids, with a couple of part-time oldsters doing the
light stuff. If what I suspect is true, in the past anyone with a
spare body to get rid of hauled it to the compactor, dumped it in
overnight, and left again." "They filled the compactor
ready for the morning's start?" "Uh-huh. The old chap who
runs it would just have pressed the button when he got there the
next morning. When enough bricks had fallen out into the loader
he runs them to the next ship to lift and loads them into the
outer fuel chamber. That's what did it. He pressed the button.
The compactor gives a groan and dies. He calls the family. The
brother rushes over to fix the compactor, checks the load in it
first, and guess what he finds?" Tani laughed. "I see what
you mean. Bad luck for the killers. Did you ask how often the
compactor breaks down?" "I did. They said it's very
rare. That was only the third time in the five years the system's
been going. But—and listen to this—the other two times it was at the
end of the day. They fixed it overnight and were running again by
morning. In other words: It was unlikely anyone but the family
ever knew about those times. The method must have looked like a
sure thing for disposal. It never broke down." A woman bustled in just
then, laid papers on the desk, and departed in silence. Anders
turned to leaf through them. He glanced up. "Nothing important.
Interviews with everyone we could find at once who lives near the
mining port. No one saw or heard a thing." He shifted a switch.
"Is that pathology report in yet?" "Not yet, sir." "Crats." Anders sat back. "I
asked them to do Ideena first. Maybe finding out what was used on
her will give me a place to start." He looked as if he was about
to explode again. "The nerve of them. I'm looking
everywhere for that pair and someone kills them. Right under my
nose. Then sticks them in the garbage." His gaze on them
sharpened. "Do you think this beast master business could be the
link?" "I think so," Tani said
thoughtfully. "We know they were involved with both raids.
Mandy's imitation of the voice she heard was identified on
Brightland. The authorities there were certain it was Ideena.
Logan saw the woman who shot him and is certain it was her. The
pair are known to have been working together for years. But look
at their records. They don't steal animals." Anders was reading swiftly
down the list of ascribed crimes again. "No. They go for portable
high value. I can see them taking your Thunder-talker's regalia.
Green or white cat's-eye gems are worth a lot of credits in a
very small package." "But this time they grabbed
whatever they could find of some value. Yet they also stopped
much longer to pick up a pair of coyotes, a family of meercats,
and Surra, injured though she was. I think it's the third man. He
was the one after the animals. The other two were on contract
with the right to loot." "Makes sense." Anders
propped his chin on one hand as he reread Ideena's rap sheet.
"That ship was hers. Since officially she and Baris were
fugitives wanted for questioning on both crimes against a citizen
and interplanetary crimes, my people have been tearing the ship
apart. So far they've found some fascinating things which may
clear up a number of the crimes Brightland has listed here.
Nothing on your problem as yet. That may come. "The man who specializes in
the job says he's rarely seen such diverse ways to hide
contraband. He's sure there are still a number of places he
hasn't found. They'd have required damage to the ship and so long
as we had no conviction we couldn't do that." Tani smiled sweetly. "But
now the ship's owners of record have been murdered. It's your
duty to find out how that happened. If you have to tear the ship
down to basic structure it's legal, surely?" "Yeeess. Yes. It is." Anders
was thinking. "After all, it's clear the owners were criminals.
That's plain from things we've found so far. There's no record of
any deed of gift or will disposing of the ship. We should make
every attempt to satisfy court requirements. We have to find
those who'd inherit." "Apart from which, don't you
have the Contingency Law?" Storm suggested before reciting:
"Where the owner of a property has been involved in provable
criminal acts and dies before conviction, the state may
confiscate the property, provided no immediate or minority heirs
exist." He pointed to the documents before Anders. "Baris and Ideena were never
legally bonded. Not to anyone else or each other, and they're
both dead. They have no known children. Brightland says they come
from respectable families there. Their respective parents
formally and legally disowned them. Their siblings are all
adults. Neither Baris nor Ideena have had any contact with their
families in many years. So they can't have any legal
responsibility to sibling offspring. So far as I can see the
Contingency Law applies." Anders nodded. "I'll speak
to the head of the search team." He touched a panel. "Jyrin? Yes,
Anders. Listen. We're applying Contingency Law to that ship
you're in. Rip it apart. I don't care what you do. Just find
everything there is to find even if you have to take it down to
the hull plating." He nodded in reply to a question. "No. On my
authority. We've checked records. No immediate or minor heirs. Go
to it." He turned to grin at them
both. "Jyrin's a good man with similar habits to a Trastorian
burrower." He chuckled. "He looks a bit like one as well but if
there's anything in that ship to find, Jyrin will dig it out.
Once he's done the ship can be put back together again and join
the mining fleet. The governor will be delighted about that.
We've been needing a fourth ship." Tani laughed. "Everyone
benefits. Except Baris and Ideena. I keep wondering who the third
person with them was." "Speaking of a third
person," Anders queried idly. "Where's your brother?" "Where else? With Laris at
the circus." "Which reminds me, I had a
spacegram from Brad Quade. Not long. But he's found out something
more for the girl." He picked up a report and handed it over. It
was as brief as promised. Tani read the few lines rapidly and
looked up. "He says they've traced her
and her mother via two other worlds to Fremlyn. Her mother was
listed in the camp there as Shalmarra Trehannan." Her voice went
up, "And her father as Aylaris who was already dead. See, Storm?
They combined their names for Laris. Brad says that the Fremlyn
camp took in refugees from Bowlil, Meril—and Ishan just before the Xiks
destroyed it. He thinks Ishan is the most likely, but not to tell
Laris that until he finds out more." Storm picked up the
spacegram. "We could go now. Even if we don't find her we could
give this to Logan to pass along." He allowed a tiny smile to
warm his eyes. "I'm sure he'd enjoy that." He swept Tani up, bade
Anders farewell, and once outside hailed a hovercab. They were
borne in the direction of the circus. "Why don't we just give
Logan the report when he comes in tonight?" "Because," Storm said
slowly. "I've been wondering. Those raiders. They're stealing
animals. Where's the easiest place to hide a tree?" Tani blinked. "In a ... I
see. You'd hide animals among other animals. In a private
collection or a zoo except that those don't travel. But a circus
does. I've had a nasty thought too. Those raiders seemed to know
just where to find me. Our High Peaks ranch, fine. That's all on
record. They could have got into conversation with anyone from
High Peaks district." "Except that they didn't.
Remember? They arrived and flew straight to the Djimbut camp then
on to the ranch. No conversations." "So who knew where I'd be?
Brad has a big map of High Peaks on the study wall at the basin
ranch. There's a sketch of the ranch house in the corner. Who's
been to see that?" Storm hesitated. "Laris was
at the basin ranch with us. But how would she know about the clan
camp?" "What do you think Logan
would have talked about? He knew I was going there to hunt for a
ten-day once Laris was gone. I told him just before the circus
left Arzor. I even said I might stay a lot longer if the hunting
was really good. I know he'd have talked about the clan. He's
proud of being a ranger and of me being the Djimbut
clan-friend." The reply was thoughtful.
"That's all possible. But there's one thing there. The raiders
came in as if they expected the Nitra to lie down for them. Laris
would have known better if Logan talked so much. She'd know Nitra
aren't Norbies. They're the wild clans. They're warriors who
shoot first and ask questions of the body. Maybe she steered the
raiders that way—if it was her—hoping they'd fail and be
killed." The cab stopped and the two
of them climbed out. "Say nothing," Storm cautioned. "Let her see
nothing. She's bonded. She may have been forced into this but
even so, she'd be a risk if she realized we're suspicious. We'd
better find Logan first." They found him at the side
entrance to the main tent. The afternoon performance was on and
he was watching the antics of the carras and Terran dogs. Storm
gave him the report from his father and watched as he read it.
Logan's gaze shifted to where Laris waited in line. The next act
was the girl and the tigerbats. His gaze warmed as he watched
her, his face shifting into softer lines. Tani caught Storm's
flickering glance at her and nodded slightly. Logan was in
love. Once the acts were
completed, customers filed out. Laris came running to Logan. "I
have to change, then check all the animals, Dedran's gone into
the city with Cregar for a couple of hours so I'm doing his
rounds. I'll be back soon." She was as good as her word.
They accompanied her to the dog cage, then to spend a little time
with the carras. Quietly Tani began to talk. She spoke of Minou
and Ferarre, how she loved them. How much they were missed and
how sure she was that they missed her and grieved for her
absence. After that Storm took up the theme, telling tales of his
war, of sabotage and reconnaissance missions on strange worlds,
and how a team could be one. Logan noticed nothing but
Storm saw the girl's increasing distress. Her face showed little
but the movements and the posture of her body all betrayed
her. *Sister-without-fur. There
is suspicion in their minds toward you.* *Why? How could they
guess?* *I do not know. But they
wonder. Now may be the time to enlist aid. Swiftly, distract
Logan, when he is gone from your side a moment, speak to the
woman. Be cautious in what you say.* Storm was wondering still
more as he watched. The girl had been almost frantic with stress.
Then, abruptly, her movements changed to those of one who
listened to a voice unheard by the others present. He'd seen that
posture in first-in scouts who had ear-implants. But this child
couldn't have one. To what was she listening? Or to whom? She
asked Logan to go ahead and see that no one was with the
tigerbats. Storm could tell she was deliberately walking more
slowly as they followed Logan. Storm waited, hoping. Laris spoke carefully. She
must make them understand how she was bound by Dedran. She must
betray nothing more than that. Not yet. To Storm's puzzlement,
she began talking about her cat. "I found him at the edge of
the spaceport. He was only a tiny kitten and starving." She
remembered Prauo as he'd been then. His paws, too large for his
little body, and his now distinctive black-and-gold markings had
been softer shades of fawn and a darkish brown. "I couldn't leave him to die
but I was afraid Dedran wouldn't let me keep him. Once he'd seen
Prauo he didn't mind though, he said Prauo might learn tricks and
fit in, if he didn't he could always be sold somewhere." Storm
saw the fear flare brightly in her gaze as she said that and he
began to glimpse her problem. "There's no proof you own
Prauo?" he asked gently. "None, and I'm bonded. On
some worlds Dedran owns not only me, but anything I may have or
earn as well. It was circus food which fed Prauo, a circus bed he
slept on, Dedran owns it all. I have no ownership papers for
Prauo." "Nor does Dedran, I
imagine?" Tani asked. "That wouldn't matter, he
owns me and anyhow, he can always get papers if he wants them."
Storm heard her comment with interest. That Dedran could always
obtain false ownership papers for an animal fitted in with their
suspicions about the tigerbats. He'd mention to Versha what Laris
had said once they were away from here. Laris was still
talking. "You don't know how
fortunate you are, you have your teams within the law and they're
Terran animals, they can't be harmed or taken from you legally
anyhow. The only law which covers Prauo and me says that he isn't
mine." Her gaze fixed on his, and there was both terrible fear
and blazing passion in her voice. "I love Prauo, he's my
friend, I can't even imagine being without him after all this
time. If anything happened to him I think I'd die. We're bound
together—as much as your team is to you.
I'd do anything I had to do to save Prauo; anything at all, no
matter how bad it was." Storm and Tani exchanged
looks, understanding at last how Laris might have been coerced.
If the girl had been entangled in the plot to steal Terran beasts
it had been under duress, yet they would withhold their final
decision on her true guilt or innocence until they discovered the
extent of her involvement. Tani had spent an earlier
part of the day at the graveside of her father. Anders had taken
her there. She'd stood and wept quietly as she read the words
graven deep into the stone. Her father had given everything, his
life, his team, his hope of return, to save an embattled people
struggling against a merciless enemy. Now she looked at Laris.
The girl had nothing, only the cat she loved. She would risk
anything rather than watch him lost to her. In a way her decision
was similar to the one Tani's father had made. Tani's voice was
gentle. She needed to make a bargain clear but without saying
anything which could be used against them later. "We do understand. You know
our grief. Maybe there is hope. A chance that Prauo could have
title established. If so then maybe our grief would also be
lessened." Laris looked them both in
the eye. "If Prauo was safe I'm sure it would be so. But I will
take no risks with Prauo, he must be safe." "We can find out what the
law says and what can be done for you both. How would we speak to
you safely?" "I can tell Logan you are
trying to secure Prauo for me. Dedran has encouraged me to spend
time with him. Pass any word you have for me through him."
Storm's eyebrows rose a little at that. So, the circus boss had a
use for Logan's affection for Laris, did he? No doubt it had been
where much of the information used had come from. "Taking my name in vain?"
Logan had returned. Laris explained and he
nodded eagerly. "I can do that. I think it'd be great if Prauo
couldn't ever be taken away from you. He's beautiful." *The human has
discernment.* *He likes me.* *Great discernment. A good
beginning, furless-sister. I think they understand your dilemma,
their feelings of distrust and anger against you have faded
somewhat.* He was gone again and Laris
returned to showing her visitors about, gradually relaxing with
Logan's teasing. If there was word about the tigerbats they'd let
her know about that too, she was assured. It might be possible to
use that information, if the animals had been illegally obtained,
to secure Prauo to her as well. How, they weren't sure. But a way
might be found. She slept soundly that night. Her heart lifted
with the beginning of hope. Logan came the next day.
Laris didn't mind seeing him alone and openly. Dedran was still
happy for her to learn all she could from Logan. The boy laughed
as he explained his early visit. "Storm says I'd forget my
head if it wasn't screwed on. I forgot to give you the official
hard copy report on your family." He sobered. "Listen, Laris. You
know who your parents were. Aylaris Trehannan was your father. He
and your mother combined names for you." "Which may mean I was their
first child?" "It's likely. You don't
remember any other smaller kid with you?" Laris shook her head. "I
don't remember much of anything about my mother. I told Mr.
Quade. I think I was about five or six when she died." "According to this report
your father must have died at least two years before that. There
may not have been any other children. There was no trace of him
in the two camps before your mother died. But in that last one
Brad found your father's name listed as deceased. It sounds as if
your mother knew how he died and had given the authorities the
information so it could be correctly listed along with her, and
your, details." "But will Brad find anything
more? That's the question." Logan snorted. "You don't
know my father. Once he's on a trail he's relentless. If there's
anything at all he'll find it." The girl took a deep breath.
She'd thought about this all night and had talked it over with
Prauo. She would gamble now with both their futures, trusting
that what Tani and Storm had offered earlier was true. Logan
liked her, maybe he'd see that promises made to her were
kept. "I have to tell you this,
Logan. You know I'm bonded to Dedran?" He nodded silently,
waiting. "He's made me break laws for him. Me and Prauo. We've
had to do burglaries. He said that I'd obey him or he'd take
Prauo away. When I still argued he said he'd sell Prauo to an
arena, or kill him for his skin. I couldn't let him do that." Her
mouth trembled. "I always planned to get
away. Prauo stole credits he found on some of those jobs and gave
them to me. Sometimes Dedran threw me a few part-credits as well.
We've saved for years. I've enough saved now to manage for a
while once the bond ends and I'm free." She shivered, waiting.
"Do you hate me?" Logan remembered the things
Brad had said. Bits and pieces about the De Pyall camps. One
night he'd mused aloud, and quite graphically, on what it must
have been like for a small girl left alone, shifted from camp to
camp, struggling to survive. To Logan it sounded like horror. He
could only marvel that Laris had survived and done so with her
courage intact. He reached out, curled her into the circle of one
arm, and looked down into deep brown eyes. "I don't hate you. Brad told
me some of what it must have been like in the camps. Even after
all that you could find a half-dead cub and love him back to
life. Care so much you'd do things you hated to keep him safe.
Dedran's a lousy clicker." A flash of amusement showed
in the eyes which surveyed him. "More than that. He's guild, I
think." "Is he? Versha would be interested in
that. No," he corrected as she startled. "We'll keep that quiet.
But if all this falls apart it might help get her on our side."
He hugged her hard. "Go and do your show. I'll see you
afterward." They spent time together later as she cared for the
animals. Once he'd gone she vanished to check Surra. Cregar would
be taking care of the other hidden beasts. In a secret room Cregar
cradled meercat babies again, his heart filling with love. Hing
blinked sleepily at him. The babies scrambled, churred, and
trilled affectionately, ending up in a jumble in his lap. His
hands slid over small, firm, warm bodies. The faint mind-touches
from them were growing stronger. If battle-fortune favored him,
in a few more weeks he would have part of a team again. At least
two of the babies would accept him as their beast
master. His conscious mind worried
at the problems they faced. Baris and Ideena were gone. But
Larash-Ti was more energetic than ever. Dedran seemed to have no
idea of how to deal with events. Worse, the local Thieves Guild
patrons complained that all the peacekeeper activity was
inhibiting their business. It wouldn't take much more before the
local patrons leaned on Nhara to close the circus and provide a
scapegoat. Also Cregar had found a
reason why Dedran seemed so smug about lack of proof. It wasn't
that it didn't exist as of now. But when he wished it to stop
existing it would. Cregar didn't like that idea. Not considering
what it meant. He'd come into this business on a promise and a
belief. It looked as if the promise was hollow. The belief was
possible but without the promise, he'd still have little. So
where did that leave him? He could think of answers to that
question and he didn't like them any better. He should act. But he wasn't
sure which direction was the best way to jump. He'd wait a while
longer. Observe, be ready. Keep an eye on the kid and her cat
too. He didn't want them hurt and Dedran was a great believer in
clearing away loose ends. Cregar stroked the meercats and allowed
his mind to run free, to a time long ago when he'd been more than
he was. When one had been many and many one. The enemy had
slaughtered his team and Terran Command had refused him another.
They'd claimed not to have enough beasts but he was sure they'd
lied. Driven by need he'd done
something stupid and after that there was no chance for him to
ever regain what he'd had. Then Terra was gone, and, as he'd
feared, all hope of a second team with it. If he could have
remembered how to pray he'd have prayed then. To have back, even
for an hour, what togetherness had once been his. Belief, hope,
consciousness faded. He slept as the furred ones snuggled
close. Chapter
Seventeen Two days later Storm woke to
an urgent beeping. He rolled over and peered at the wall chrono.
Great Spirit. It was barely four in the morning. What message had
that importance? He touched the comunit to life and mumbled at
it. The unit squawked cheerily in response. "Up and awake, my lad. I'll
be with you in ten minutes bearing news." "Versha?" "The same. Move it." The
unit clicked off and she was gone. Storm groaned as beside him
Tani stirred. "I heard that," she said
sleepily. Her eyes cleared as she sat up. She focused on the
time. "Better do as she said. If it wasn't important she wouldn't
have woken us this early after such a late night." She yawned
widely. "Last night was worth it though. I enjoyed
myself." Storm could only agree.
They'd gone to a place Anders knew. It served lightly frothed
fruit drinks, tart and delightful to the tongue. The
entertainment was provided by one of the allied alien races, a
team of half a dozen who sang, juggled, and ran a very clever and
amusing beast show. Afterward Storm and Tani had stayed a while
talking to them and swapping animal tales. They'd had a wonderful
time even if they had only returned three hours before Versha had
woken them again. Tani was moving swiftly,
brushing her hair and watching the time as she hurried into her
clothes. Storm followed suit. It was just on the promised ten
minutes that both appeared from their room to meet Logan erupting
blearily from his. "Awake too, little
brother?" Logan surveyed him
indignantly. "If that's what you'd call it. Do you know, Versha
woke me just now and it's only four A.M." He sagged dramatically
and gave a hollow moan. "I'm not used to this. It's too much of a
shock to my system. I need restoring." Storm's eyes were amused.
Tani laughed. "You two. You'd think that you'd never been up this
early before. At home you're often awake and away by
dawn." "Very true," Logan assured
her. "But not after we'd only gotten to bed three hours
earlier. If I'm riding at four I'm in bed by eight or nine. I
like a decent length of sleep. This had better be worth
it." "I suspect it will be."
Storm sobered. "Versha wouldn't wake us this early unless it was
something important." He headed for the small kitchen attached to
the suite. "I'll start drinks. Swankee for everyone?" He gathered
the nods and began to spoon the powder into mugs. They heard
Versha run up the stairs as he passed around the steaming
drinks. "Up and awake. Good. That
swankee? Great. Give me a cup, sit down, and I'll tell you a few
things." She was all quick movement, her eyes glowing as she
accepted the swankee and spread papers on the small table. The
others sat and allowed her to begin as they sipped the hot
chocolate-tasting drink quietly. "First thing. Those tigerbat
samples that Logan got us, Lereyne contacted me directly about
them a couple of hours ago. The pair checked were definitely
obtained illegally. Samples indicated that the animals are the
offspring of two of the tigerbats held in the reserve. The
reserve people say that their records list when the animals went
missing. At the time it was feared they had strayed somehow from
the reserve. "As you may know, the
reserve there is in mountain foothills. An apparently natural
break in the force-field fence was found and the reserve staff
thought the young tigerbats had escaped and vanished into the
mountains. They could find no trace of them but hoped they'd turn
up when they matured sexually and came back to look for a swarm.
It looks instead as if the pair were darted and stolen. Possibly
the swarm was sleep-gassed and this pair chosen to order. Lereyne
wants them back. If Dedran can prove he purchased them
legally from the thieves without knowing the beasts were stolen,
then he'll be compensated." "If he didn't and we march
in, they'll guess somebody's talked. I don't want Laris blamed."
Logan was worried. Versha grinned. "Quite true
and I have no wish to get the girl into trouble. I'll go. You can
be there already just visiting. But I have the readout for the
tigerbats DNA records from Lereyne. I plan to say that Lereyne
has heard of the tigerbats, insists on DNA matching because
tigerbats have been stolen, and that I'll have all of them
cross-matched on patrol authority. I shall be very official when
this pair show up as matching reserve records." "Is that it?" "No, I'm afraid it isn't."
She sat fingering a sheaf of papers. "Storm, you were a beast
master, and Tani, you were involved at the beast master breeding
and recuperation center to some extent before you left Terra. Do
either of you remember a man called Jason Regan? He was a beast
master whose team was killed by the Xiks. He returned to Terran
Beast Master Command but at the time they were short of beasts
for new teams. They said he would have to wait but apparently he
didn't want to do that." She snorted in exasperation. "Instead the idiot convinced
a trainee to try some trick called meshing. It was supposed to
enable both humans to control the one team. They failed, the
trainee died, and Regan's abilities were partially burned out.
Regan was court-martialed but the court decided that the trainee
had acted as he did of his own free will, and there wasn't any
specific law to prevent Regan from doing as he'd done. However he
was discharged, he left the service, and disappeared." Tani wrinkled her forehead.
"I remember hearing talk when I was small about what a dangerous
thing it was to do that. I don't think I ever heard that
name." "Storm?" He nodded reluctantly. "I
didn't have much to do with him. He was older. Like Tani's
father. They took beast masters where they could find them during
the Xik war and there were never many with the beast master
abilities. I did hear about Regan though. There was a rumor at
the time that meshing could open you right up. Give you a team
channel which was twice as good. Someone was supposed to have
done it and got that result, so this pair tried and Regan was
burned out." "What does that mean
exactly?" "They weren't sure," Storm
said slowly. "At the time it meant that Regan couldn't touch any
of the beasts mentally. He couldn't keep working as a beast
master. They thought that the channel might heal in time. You
have to know, Versha. All this was experimental. It was war, they
couldn't keep him and hope that in five or ten years he might be
useful again. They offered him a commission in another unit. He
refused. There was talk that he'd suffered some brain damage in
the memory areas. He resigned from the unit and before they could
conscript him somewhere else or order treatment he was gone." He
waved at her papers. "Do they have any more?" "Yes, and it's interesting.
They finally discovered that he's been with Dedran's circus most
of the time. Calling himself Jas Cregar. The surnames are just
similar-sounding enough that he'd learn to reply quickly. Not
give himself away. The few family records we've accessed from his
time in the unit say that he came from Ishan. His grandparents
emigrated there from Britain with the third settler
wave. "His parents had a daughter
about ten years younger than Regan. No record of what happened to
the family but they're all likely dead. As you know, Ishan was
overrun by Xiks about fourteen years back. Most of the men and a
lot of the single women died holding off the Xiks to get the
other women and kids clear. The remaining defenders died when
Ishan was incinerated. So this Regan probably has no family we
can use to appeal to him to help." She grimaced. "We may need help. I've
talked to patrol HQ. They've had a man in the guild this last
couple of years. We've likely lost him now. He's gone silent. But
before that he was able to reports rumors in the guild that a
patron called Nhara has a scam going. What it is he's never found
out but there have been hints the guild initially expected great
things from it and it involves animals." "The circus," Tani said.
"They have illegal animals. They have a burned-out beast master.
Logan says Laris told him Dedran could get fake papers for any
animal if he wanted them. Is there anything else which could
point to the circus?" Versha picked out a paper with care and
handed it to her. Tani read and handed it on so that Storm and
Logan read it, heads together. Then they all looked at
Versha. "It isn't proof, my Arzoran
friends. But yes. They found a tiny scrap of Terevian peavine on
Baris's clothing. And the only place we could find that is
currently using that is the circus. They use it as animal bedding
because it's lighter than many other forms of bedding and it's
edible for the animals in an emergency. Of course there's nothing
to say Baris and Ideena weren't animal lovers, or fond of the
circus and went to watch the show. But it's another
clue." Logan was thinking
furiously. They had more than clues. Laris had told him she
believed a guild patron was involved with Dedran and the circus.
Dedran had her and Prauo burgling for him. And she'd opened up
further about that the next night, once she'd seen he didn't
condemn her. It looked as if Dedran was into stealing industrial
secrets for resale. If the description of some of the items he'd
had Laris and Prauo steal for him was accurate, such thefts could
also tie into the guild. He didn't want to hurt or betray Laris,
but this could be a chance for her and Prauo to get away. He
spoke quietly. "It's more than a clue.
Laris talked to me after I told her her parent's names. Versha,
she's terrified Dedran would manage to hold title to her cat.
That he'd use the chance to kill it and punish her if he even
suspected she'd talk. He's been using her to commit crimes by
threatening to torture and kill Prauo in front of her. If you can
get her clear with the cat and get her clear title to the beast
she could give you a lot." "Would she come in and talk
to me?" "No, not unless she was sure
Prauo was safe first." Versha sat thinking. "I was
going to raid the circus for the tigerbats. What if, as an
apparent afterthought, we collect the girl and her cat as well?
Anders could say that we want to check her and the cat because
there had been a minor outbreak of disease elsewhere which may
have been started by a similar animal. Once we have her clear we
should be able to sort something out. If she talks and her
information's good we can hit the circus again with a full-scale
raid. Anders would be happy to supply the men." She
chuckled. "He's still so mad about
losing Baris and Ideena you can see steam coming from his ears
when he thinks about it. We can take the tigerbats, the girl, and
the cat, using just a couple of Anders's men, and get the
animals and the girl out before Dedran knows that's what we're
after. It should work if we make it clear we're confiscating
animals suspected of being illegally on Trastor, and that so far
as the girl and cat are concerned, National Disease Control is in
charge. Logan, you find the girl. Tell her the idea. I don't want
her thinking we're going to take her cat away for real and having
her panic. Okay?" "I'll go as soon as they'll
be about. That's around seven." "Good. I'll go and talk to
Anders. Tani, I suggest you and Storm wander along to the circus
around midday. That's when we'll hit them. It could be useful to
have you there. Logan, don't tell the girl anything more than
we're getting her and the cat out in payment for talking freely
to the patrol. She isn't to know about Baris and Ideena,
peavines, or a later raid. Understand?" He nodded agreement.
"Right. I'll see you all in a few hours." She hurried away, the papers
clutched in one long-fingered brown hand. She also wanted more
information on this Regan's background. If they could turn him
into an informant she knew they'd find out enough to make a real
dent in the guild. Storm stood, Tani joining
him as they headed for their room to dress for the outdoors.
Logan was behind them. He'd dress properly then get something
light to eat. He couldn't manage a real breakfast, he was too
excited. He'd grab a snack, then make for the circus. At seven Laris would be
cleaning the animals' cages. She'd be busy with that for a couple
of hours. The other staff had their own work and she'd be alone
for most of that time. He'd showed up a number of times to help
and just spend the time with her. No one would think it odd. But
with no one around he could tell her not to worry, explain what
was to happen, have her prepared to walk in at just the right
moment with Prauo and be scooped up and away before Dedran could
prevent it. Laris was terrified of what
her owner might do if he had any reason to believe she'd talked
about his affairs. But then from some of the things she'd
confided, Dedran was indeed both violent and a killer if he
thought he was threatened. Logan wasn't exactly terrified of the
man, but he did share Laris's belief that Dedran, cornered, would
be very dangerous. As for Cregar, Laris had
made it plain the man had been a half-friend to her and Prauo.
For that Logan was ready to hope the man wasn't involved. He ate
slowly, thinking of how best to handle his actions at the circus,
then, after clearing away the debris of his meal, he summoned a
hovercab. It dropped him at the entrance to the roped-off circus
area. The circus tents showed pale against the early sky as Logan
made his way unobtrusively to the animal lines and found Laris
sweeping. She looked up and her face broke into a wide, happy
smile. "Heyla. Come to
help?" "To help and to talk." There
was a tone to that which warned her. She stepped to the cage
door, glancing about. "I know where Cregar is. And
at this hour Dedran will be doing last night's receipts over
breakfast. He won't be outside for another hour. If you help me
do the next few cages we can stand where I can watch for anyone
and we can talk. That way if Dedran or Cregar turn up I won't be
behind with the work." They worked industriously for half an
hour. With the work well ahead of schedule Logan drew her to one
side. She checked down the line of cages and nodded. "No one in sight. What is
it, Logan? It's important, isn't it?" "Yes." He caught her small
hands up against his cheek. "Listen to what I'm saying, love, and
don't interrupt yet. First, we all know about Dedran using you
and Prauo to steal. No!" he warned when her face whitened.
"Listen to me, I had to tell them, but Storm spent time in one of
the camps once as part of an undercover job. He knows what
they're like. Brad worked with people who came to Arzor from the
camp on Meril. We all understand that you had to get out and just
how Dedran forced you to steal. You didn't have a choice, he
owned you, he could kill Prauo, beat you half to death, and no
one would prevent it." Her shoulders hunched slowly
as she half-turned from him. Logan reached out to pull her back
into the curve of his arm. "I'm telling you, Laris. We understand
how you had to get out of the camp, then how you had to
obey Dedran. You've done a lot of reading, you know the law on a
bond-servant. You acted as you did to save your life and if it
came to a court they'd accept that." "What about
Prauo?" "I have Versha's word that
he will stay with you." Laris eyed him with a
flicker of hope. "Can she keep that promise—and will she keep it?" "Oh yes. Versha's word is
good, and on Arzor she's the patrol's assistant security head for
the planet." Laris's eyes widened. "Then
she can say that, but you're certain she's agreed?" Logan met her gaze, willing
her with all his heart to trust him. "I swear!" he said slowly.
"Storm had her write out a note of agreement saying you could
keep Prauo just so long as it was proved you were the closest
person to an owner he has. I saw the letter and read it, my word
on that." Prauo's mind voice cut in
then. *He speaks the truth as he knows it, I would trust
him.* *I think I do,* Laris
thought back, then she spoke aloud to Logan: "How do I prove
Prauo is mine, though?" "You told me once you'd do
anything for Prauo. You may need to accept deep-probe to prove
Prauo is yours. Can you do that?" Laris took a deep breath and
let it out raggedly. "I can do it. What else do you want me to
do?" "A couple of men from the
Endangered Species Conservation Unit here will be arriving around
midday. They will have a warrant to take the tigerbats. Once it's
proved the two females are stolen property the whole swarm will
be confiscated to be returned to the sanctuary on Lereyne. At the
same time other people from the National Disease Control will
collect you and Prauo. If anyone asks, they'll be claiming they
need to test you both." "Why?" Logan grinned. "Because, as
they'll tell Dedran if he asks, there's been an outbreak of a
disease on another planet which may have been caught from a
cat-like creature similar to Prauo. Disease Control wants to
check out the two of you in case." "What if Dedran doesn't want
to let me go, Logan? He knows I could tell too much for his
safety; he might try to stop them from taking me." "Can you have Prauo make a
fuss if they try to take him without you?" Eyes opened again in the
back of her head. *I will do that, furless-sister. I'll be so
ferocious without you to calm me, they will insist on taking you
with them.* Laris smiled. "Prauo will do
that if I signal him. Tell Versha to be ready." "I'll make sure she knows."
He picked up a broom again. "Let me help you finish. Just in case
you can't get back to the circus for a while you might want to
sneak off in a few minutes and have a bit of time to do
things." Laris smiled at him,
relaxing. She had to admit that when he started this discussion
she'd wondered. Almost all of her life she'd been used and she'd
been afraid this was what would happen again here. But she
trusted Logan, he was doing his best for her, and his family and
their friends knew about her, all about her, and they still
accepted her, understanding she'd done only what was necessary
for her to survive and save Prauo. Logan was right too, a
little time now would be useful. She didn't want to leave her
small hoard behind. If Dedran ran he'd run with the ship if he
could—and her stash would go with him.
Apart from her savings she didn't really have anything worth
taking—except her ring, and once she'd
told all she could to Versha, she'd have to give that back to the
Quades. Cregar passed just then with
a nod to her, and Laris, her senses quick with her years in the
camps, noticed the odd way Logan looked at the man before he was
out of sight. She knew that look. It said, "I know something
about you." She wondered what Logan
could know and that brought another thought to mind. Cregar. He'd
been kind to her. Saved her from Baris, trusted her over his own
hoard while he was gone. She should warn him. If Logan knew
something about the man then she'd guess the patrol did too. They
could arrest him as well. He might prefer they didn't. And what
about Storm and Tani's beasts? She swept so hard as she mulled
over her options that Logan grinned. "You'll wear out the cage
floor." "Less to sweep if I do," she
laughed back. The work was almost done when Dedran appeared. He
eyed Logan and grunted. No skin off his nose if the stupid kid
wanted to work for free. "Laris, we'll use the carras
on the trapeze with you in the afternoon performance. I'm
switching that act with Jonran and his
knife-throwing." "Why?" Laris asked in
surprise. The act had been popular. "The idiot was practicing
this morning to add knife-juggling. He missed. He'll be out a
while. I told him to pack his bags. We don't have time for fools
who play about and leave me short-handed with the acts." He
turned on his heel. "And don't forget the costumes." Laris took the opportunity.
"Logan, I have to go." Her voice lowered. "I'll see you around
midday. I'll have Prauo with me. We'll be cleaning a cage by the
tigerbats. That way I'll be just where Versha can see me." He
hugged her quickly and left to tell the patrol officer all was
arranged. Laris promptly darted in another direction. She found
Cregar where she'd expected, just leaving the hidden cage with
the meercats. She slid unobtrusively past, speaking to him in the
soft slurred speech of the camps. Her lips were slightly parted
but remained unmoving. "Got'a talk. Danger
you." Cregar strolled in another
direction, circled, and met her behind the cage line. "What danger me?" Now he
could speak more clearly but in his worry he'd reverted to
underworld brevity. Laris answered in kind.
"Patrol comes. Logan say they know tigerbat illegals. Reclaim
they. Take me 'n' Prauo too. Logan not say but think me he know
something 'bout you. Look at you odd you pass us. Maybe you
somewhere else sun-high." Cregar sucked in a breath.
Let the girl go and she'd talk. Looked as if it was over for
Dedran. But the animals—Dedran had plans for them Cregar
had never liked. His hands remembered the feel of small, warm,
trusting meercat bodies. Of the first tiny itching of his
mind-channels reopening. The meercats hadn't bonded to him as yet
although there were signs they could, and might choose him if
they did. But now at least he knew his ability had been only
burned out for a few years. It could be brought back. Yet with
what? He remembered his team. Las
and Lara, the mongeese. Keeroo, the Aubearan falcon. And Mali,
the dune-cat, so like the sick beast in the hidden cage. He felt
again the love flow across the bond. The trust, the place where
oneness was. He'd loved them all. Mali had been half his heart,
Las and Lara his laughter, Keeroo his eyes. With them gone he'd
lost heart, laughter, and that inner vision. Laris waited patiently as he
pondered. Finally he turned to her. His eyes were different, she
thought. It was as if life had flowed in to break the ice of
indifference. Even his voice had changed. There was a clean snap
to it, the slurring forgotten. "Tell the patrol about the
hidden cages. Warn them. I can't just open the cages and let the
beasts go, there are reasons. And Dedran has the cages rigged to
explode, destroy any evidence. I'll try to defuse that. Tell
them, mount a full raid at midday. I'll try to be done in
time." "What about you?" His smile was sad. "It's too
late for me. You get out clean, girl. Take your cat and be free.
I'll do my best for the animals. Tell the patrol to be careful in
case I couldn't get all the hidden cages cleared." He walked away
abruptly, leaving Laris standing there. Well, she'd told him. She
bit her lip nervously. This business about the cages upset her
badly. She didn't know much about such things. Surely Cregar was wrong; he
could simply open the cages, the meercats would run out as soon
as the door was opened and Storm called them. The same with the
coyotes. It would take only seconds for them to be safe. But not
Surra. The big cat was weakened by months of drugs, illness, and
her original injuries. She'd almost died but somehow Laris had
helped her cling to life. Cregar would have to clear
Surra's cage first. But could he? On the other side of the circus
Cregar was thinking he shouldn't take that risk. Surra's cage was
right at the end of the line. Dedran could see it from his office
tent. No, better to clear the other two cages first. Then if
Dedran saw him he could maybe hold the man off long enough to
save the dune-cat. The others would already be safe. He checked the time. Not
long. The cages had been cunningly rigged with the explosives. To
clear both would take much of the time remaining before the
patrol came calling. Cregar slid under the cage housing the
meercats and began to work with hands suddenly deft. Yes, one cut
here, slip this part from that. He'd been well trained by the
unit once. It came back to him as he worked. Laris would wonder
why he didn't just let the beasts go. Dedran had been smarter than
that. Tied into the circuits in the hidden sections of the cages
was an electronic nerve-field. Dedran had these activated on the
three cages holding the meercats, coyotes, and Surra. People
could walk through the fields without registering their
existence. A beast which tried suffered agony, dying from a burst
heart. Dedran had the key to shut that off. Cregar did not. To
get them out he'd have to disable the entire system or the pain
would almost certainly kill the beasts. It was a failsafe against
escape or theft. He worked on, sweat beads starting on his skin.
One wrong move and he'd go sky-high. But so would the beasts, and
even as he sweated, his hands kept working. He cleared the circuits
under the meercats. Best to leave them be. If he let them out now
they might be seen and Dedran alerted. He inched along under the
low cage until he reached the coyotes' prison. There he worked
again feverishly. It was taking time, so much time. But now he
knew how it went and he was a little faster. He glanced at his
watch. Thirty minutes to midday. In her suite at the patrol
offices Versha was looking at information flow. Her investigator
at Ideena and Baris's ship had cracked not only a very
well-hidden safe in the ship wall but also the coded disks
inside. Very interesting. More material had come from High
Command. The last items from Regan's service file. A name in them
was somehow familiar. Where had she heard it? She shrugged. No
time to sit about wondering. Storm was reading the hard copy of
the file over her shoulder. It meant more to him than to her and
his eyes widened slightly. It was twenty-five minutes to
midday. In his office tent Dedran
was considering recent events. It looked as if the patrol could
be closing in on him. Nhara had sent a message. They'd found a
spy in the guild. The man was dead by his own hand, too quickly
for the guild experts to drain from him what may have been
spilled. It might be safer if Dedran simply upped-ship. The
Queen of the Circus was largely automatic. Liftoff at
least could be done by one person alone. But first he'd stroll
around the midway. See if there were any indications that he was
being watched. He checked the time. Twenty minutes to
midday. Versha was on her way now
with a six-peacekeeper squad, Anders, and Jared. In a hovercar
behind rode Tani with Storm and Logan. They reached the midway,
slipped into the crowd, and tried to blend in. Logan's gaze
flicked about in search of Laris. He saw her with the tigerbats,
Prauo sitting in the next cage, the door ajar. She saw them and
nodded, leaving the cage to stand by Prauo, the big cat leaning
against her shoulder. Under the coyotes' prison
Cregar sighed and slumped. One cage to go. He waited until the
aisle between cages was empty of people, dashed across, and dived
beneath the final cage. Above him Surra's ears flickered. She'd
heard a sound. She could feel danger—and also in her mind there was
the growing feel of her human getting closer. She was weak but
not quite as weak as her warders thought. She dragged herself to
lie by the door. Something was telling her Storm was near. She
would be ready. Cregar worked, hands
flashing through the motion needed to defuse the cage. For Mali
whom he'd loved. A parade of the dead and dying passed through
behind his eyes as he worked. All the beast masters who'd fought
Dedran's men. The beasts who accepted death rather than live
without their human team member. At first, locked in his
agony of aloneness he hadn't cared. Had even been glad in a small
mean way that they too should share his pain. But with the girl's
arrival things had begun to change. She reminded him of someone;
who that had been he couldn't remember. Only that he'd cared
about her. He'd tried to stay aloof from Laris. But he'd diverted
Dedran's anger or punishment from her more often than she knew.
It felt right. Then they came, Hing and her
babies, and at last he felt something touch his mind and heart
again. But each time he held them, felt channels open a fraction
further, he felt as well the guilt for what he'd done. With
emotion and earlier memories and teaching returning, he knew the
pain he'd caused. Now his guilt for the things he helped Dedran
do was all but unbearable. Superstitiously he feared that his
returning gifts would be taken again if he made no
repayment. Maybe if he could save
these, it would be counted for him. He could have his team again.
He goaded his hands to motion. Faster. He had to finish and be
away from here before anyone knew what he'd done. Boots halted
beside the cage. In a soft, deadly voice Dedran spoke. "Cregar? Care to tell me
what you're doing under there?" Chapter
Eighteen Cregar worked on for a
moment before he replied. He could only think of one
thing. "I quit, Dedran." "Do you indeed? But you know
guild rules, once in—never out. If you didn't like it
you shouldn't have joined." Let the man keep talking,
Cregar hoped. Let him tell me how clever he's been, how stupid I
am. Anything. Just so long as I have time to finish this. Dedran
didn't do the wiring himself. He had it done. If I finish he
won't be able to repair it. The animals will live. Dedran dropped to one knee,
looking at what those racing hands had accomplished. He knew more
than this idiot believed he knew. Well, well, he thought. So the
fool really was trying to save the beasts. He chuckled
patronizingly. "A pity you've wasted all
the work. But there's a dead-man switch with each of the special
cages. Too bad. And a dead man should go with it. You can't quit,
Cregar. I'm firing you." He produced the tiny deadly needier he
carried and pressed the trigger button. Cregar arched in agony as
the spray of minute missiles struck. Then he slumped. On Versha's watch, the
display finally ticked over to show midday. Dedran bent to peer under
the cage. Blood all over, the needle's scorch in the chest. That
was the end of a traitor. He straightened, resolved that it was
definitely time to depart. If this wasn't a warning he didn't
know what was. He'd go to the ship, close it up quietly, and lift
before anyone including the port officials realized what he was
doing. The circus had served its purpose. He could blame the traitor
the guild had found in its own ranks for any failure of his own
and Nhara's plans. He strolled toward the ship and was out of the
beast cage rows before something made him slow to stare around.
That was odd. The usual crowds were missing. They'd been there
half an hour ago when he'd come out to walk the midway. Where had
they gone in that time? He advanced cautiously. At the gates two
peacekeepers turned back those who would have entered. Those who
left stayed out. In the half hour Dedran had been oblivious to
this, almost all of the people wandering the sideshows and animal
cages had departed. At midday most planned to be home and were
ready to seek the gates. The time of the raid had been chosen for
that reason. With Laris's information Anders had made a decision.
He'd have the midway clear. He wanted no list of dead civilians
if a cage was accidentally triggered. Twice, circus people
noticing the odd emptying of the midway had sought out Dedran to
mention it. Each time they'd missed him. The first had looked in
the office tent and gone away muttering. The other circus
employee had missed seeing Dedran as he moved between the cages.
That second man had felt a warning chill down his own neck,
gathered his meager gear, and sought the gates. The peacekeeper
presence had reinforced his decision to be elsewhere while
something was happening. He faded into the watching crowd by the
gates and left hastily. At the far side of the cages
Laris waited with Prauo. Logan stood with her. Storm walked up to
them briskly. "Versha says that's most of
the civilians out of the area." He turned to look up at Laris
where she sat in the cage doorway. "My team. What do you know
about them?" She looked away, her voice a
whisper. "I'm sorry. I was too afraid for Prauo to tell you
before. Are you sure they have Dedran?" "Not yet but they will." He
frowned. "He was seen only a short time ago. He's still here.
Don't worry, Laris, Anders will arrest Dedran the minute he's
seen. So, talk to us. Where are my team?" "In secret cages. Some of
the bigger ones have special hidden compartments." "Show me!" he commanded.
Tani had arrived in time to hear much of this. She took Laris's
freezing hands in hers, rubbing them gently. The girl was still
so afraid of her owner, Laris needed to feel secure, to be
soothed a little. "Don't be afraid. We're all
here. I promise, Laris, Dedran won't come near you, Storm will
protect you. Are my coyotes unhurt? What about Surra and Hing and
the babies?" "Hing and the babies are all
right. The babies are growing and everything. Your coyotes are
fine, Tani. They were mad at me but I made sure they had good
food and clean water. I kept Dedran away from them." Tears began
trickling down her face. "Surra was so badly injured when they
stole her. I kept her alive. I kept telling her that Storm would
come for her. That I'd save her. I wouldn't let her die. She's in
this end cage." Storm would have looked
under the cage for the circuits. Laris pressed the back panel in
the sequence which opened it. Before anyone could prevent it,
Surra fell out into Storm's arms. She was skin and bone with
wasted muscles and fur roughened by her illness, but she was
alive. Tani was stooping by the cage. "What's this? Storm, look
here. Someone's been hurt. There's blood and a lot of
it." Prauo had leaned around Tani
and sniffed. *Cregar, sister. He dies. Dedran shot him, I think.
I follow the blood-trail.* Laris gulped. "Storm. Prauo
says Dedran shot Cregar. Cregar must have been defusing the
cages. He said he would. We have to find them both. Cregar's hurt
bad, Prauo says. And Dedran may do something awful
still." Storm was judging
disconnected circuits with a knowing eye. "This one was cleared
all right, and a job well done too. Let me check the next one
before you open it, Laris." Dedran had left quietly.
With no crowd to provide cover he had slipped along the cage row
and then darted behind the sideshow tents. Behind him Cregar
stirred. The other beasts—still in danger, and the kid too.
He knew she'd come first to try to rescue the animals. He forced
leaden arms up to where the last circuits remained working under
Surra's prison. The deadman circuit was easily disarmed. Thanks
be that Dedran couldn't resist boasting. Its greater danger lay
in not knowing it was there. Better not to emerge or try
to stand. He dragged himself back under the cages and disarmed
the switch beneath Minou and Ferarre. There. One last cage to go,
then he could rest. It was strange. He'd been sure it was earlier
in the day. But it seemed to be growing dark. Not that it
mattered. Laris would come for the beasts soon. He must have them
ready. He crawled, his breath tearing at his throat. Laris was ahead, Prauo
trotting now, tracing that painful trail and relaying it to the
girl. *He grows weaker, sister. I
think he dies. But he has some purpose. He goes toward the third
cage now.* Tani had released the
coyotes who frisked about her, leaping to nuzzle her hands. They
sent satisfaction that they were free, assurances that both were
well, and that neither had been ill-treated. The human female
with the strange cat had been kind to them. In the midway Prauo
gathered speed as he followed Cregar's trail; Laris raced after
him ahead of the others. Storm, carrying Surra and distracted by
Tani's reunion with her coyotes, was well back when Prauo
realized where Cregar was headed. The girl vanished from Storm's
sight as she dived between two large cages in a
shortcut. Cregar reached the last cage
and stared along the ground. He felt the vibrations of someone
coming. He peered out in time to see Prauo appear at the end of
the cage row. Where the cat was, the girl would not be far
behind. The last cage—it was still wired to that final
circuit! She would try to free the meercats. He would be left
watching as she and the small ones who'd trusted him died,
smeared bloodily across the midway when the deadman's switch took
its toll. She was coming. He saw the
small figure trot forward. Storm had rounded the cage some
distance away, Tani and Logan at his heels. They saw a terrible
figure appear then. Swaying, covered in blood, both new and
part-dried, Cregar rolled from under the cage and forced himself
to his feet. His eyes blurred as Laris moved toward him. His
sister. She was coming. His small, much loved sister. He couldn't
let her die. Terror for her accessed the
last of his strength as he tore open the cage panel. He leaned in
scooping up the sleep basket in which Hing was feeding her
babies. In his fear for them he was sending. Hing read the
message, *Lie still! Danger!* and she chittered the babies into a
frozen stillness in his arms. Cregar paused a fraction of
a second, then leaped backward with them. They passed through the
alarm circuit. With it shut down there was no pain for the
meercats. But the circuit noted they had left, the switch
triggered, and the cage blew up in a great smashing explosion.
Cregar had known it would. Even as he leaped he had spun,
cradling the trusting meercats in his arms, his back hunched over
them, his own flesh and bone between them and harm as he flung
himself forward. One pace, another—then the explosion came and he
fell. He went down still curled
about the startled meercats. The scythe of splinters slashed
across the alley of cages but it met only their backs. Further
down the row Prauo had read Cregar's knowledge in the last second
and dived at Laris. They rolled entangled beneath a cage. Storm,
carrying Surra, with Tani and Logan beside him, had been far
enough back to miss the deadly spray. Now they came running as
Laris and Prauo crawled out. "Are you hurt?" "No." Laris brushed him off.
"Cregar, Cregar?" She reached the fallen man and would have
turned him over but Storm had laid down his cat and now he caught
the girl's hands. "Don't. You could make the
injuries worse." Hing squirmed chittering from under Cregar and
scampered to her human. The babies followed. Storm scooped them
up and handed them gently to Tani. Then he knelt, his hands
checking with the experience of many battlefields. Cregar opened
weary eyelids and gazed up at the blurred figure. "Deadman ... tied to ...
kill-bar circuit." Hing returned, patting his bloody face with
small anxious paws. Cregar's memory turned back. "Las? Lara?" He
appealed to Storm. "My team ... are they ... okay?" "They are unhurt," Storm
said steadily. The man was dying. Whatever sins he'd committed,
so far as Storm was concerned, he'd paid for them with the lives
of Hing and her family. "Rest easy, beast master. You saved them
all. You've done well." "Shal?" Cregar could see
only a blur of light now. "Little ... sister ... Shal. I love ...
Shal?" Laris was holding his
groping hand in hers, tears pouring down her face. This was the
one who'd saved her from Baris. The only one who'd been kind to
her since she joined the circus. He'd saved the animals. Her grip
brought him back a little. His gaze cleared and he knew
her. "Laris? My cache, yours."
His eyes turned desperately to Storm. "You witness.
Hers!" "I witness. Whatever you
have is to go to Shallaris Trehannan." He saw the man's eyes open
in amazement. Storm nodded to the frantic question in these eyes.
"Yes. She is. You saved her." Cregar forced out the final
words. "Good girl... not blame." He fell mute, appealing to
Storm. "We know. I'll see she's all
right, beast master, it's Dedran who'll pay." Cregar heard the
words. It was good. All good now. He'd saved his own blood
unknowingly. Saved his team, saved his heart, laughter, the inner
vision by which a beast master lived. Darkness was coming. Time
for Jason Regan Trehannan and his team to hunt. He could see
them. They were around him, with him. He could feel their minds
holding him up. Storm was silent, waiting.
He saw the body stiffen a little, then as the eyes became blank
windows staring up, it seemed to slump and flatten. Storm had
seen it often enough. The man was gone, his spirit fled for
judgment. Well, at the last Cregar had paid blood price. May the
faraway gods open the Warrior Path to him. Hing pattered back to Storm,
swarmed up his pants leg, and cuddled close. Laris was on her
knees still holding the limp hand. Logan was beside her. Tani,
her arms full of meercat babies, was standing at Storm's back
when a voice spoke. "How charming. Now which of
you is going to walk me to my ship?" Dedran smiled at them,
needier rock-steady in one hand. Prauo appeared from under the
cage behind him and departed the ground in one soaring
black-and-gold leap. He landed, claws slashing away the needier.
Dedran yelled as they included a generous amount of skin with
that blow. Taken unaware and off-balance from the impact of
almost eighty pounds of cat, he fell backward. The big cat landed
sitting across the recumbent body. Delicately he flexed claws,
laid them across Dedran's eyes, and waited, watching Laris.
*Sister? It will not keep him from talking to those who would
hear.* She hesitated. It would be
sweet. The patrol could still drain the man of everything,
deep-probe all his secrets. She looked at her friends. Storm was
impassive. He'd accept her vengeance. Tani and Logan were less
accepting. If she did this it would always lie like a dirt smudge
across their friendship. Laris sighed. *Just stay there, Prauo.
Don't hurt him.* She brightened hopefully. *Unless he tries to
escape.* *You mean that?* *I have to. But if he tries
to hurt you or get away, then you can shred
him!* *That I shall do.* He
settled down with the air of a cat which has no intention of
moving anytime soon. Storm had watched. Yes.
Interesting. There was no doubt in his mind, even apart from the
second file he'd seen just before they left the patrol office,
that Laris had been Cregar's little sister's daughter. The ages
would fit, and there was quite a facial resemblance if one looked
for it. No one had before because the possibility had never
occurred to them. And only Storm had seen the last spacegram
which had arrived from his stepfather minutes before they left
for the circus. There hadn't been much in it, just the
information that further old records had been checked for Regan.
Those had noted that the man had reverted to his basic name and
dropped the final portion. Originally he'd been Jason Regan
Trehannan. So Laris came from a beast master line, and she
appeared as well to be bonded to the big cat—or something. Prauo's head turned toward
Storm. Purple eyes studied him. An itch awoke in his brain; then
words came. *Or something.* Storm opened his mouth in
shock and would have said he knew not what, but for the arrival
of Versha, Jared, and Anders. The woman was looking
annoyed. "We have everyone but that
damn Dedran. He's vanished into thin—" Tani and Logan moved aside.
Dedran was revealed with a smug Prauo still draped across him, a
pawful of wickedly extended claws at the ready. Versha's face
split into a wide, happy, and dangerous smile. "How nice. Fur
packaged for safety." She turned to Laris. "Can we have him now,
please?" *Prauo, time to get up. The
nice lady is going to make Dedran almost as miserable as you
could.* Prauo yawned and rose. He padded over to Laris as Anders
snapped arm-locks on the circus boss. Jared took charge of the
prisoner and marched him away. Versha surveyed them. "I think a conference in
Anders's office would be a good idea. I'd like to know what's
been happening." She glanced down. "Also if that man was Cregar,
and who killed him? I see you have your animals back though.
So—something of a happy ending." Her
smile went hungry. "For us too. Dedran will talk, my superiors
will be delighted, the guild will not be. A good result all
around, I'd say." Storm bent to lift Surra
again. "Yes." Logan had persuaded Laris to let go of Cregar's
hand and rise. He looked at the drooping girl. "We have loose
ends to tie and things to talk about. Information to share as
well. Laris?" Her head came up. "I don't want to jar Surra by
carrying her all the way, any ideas?" Given a need, Laris put
aside her grief for a little. "Lifter pallets. There's one around
in the next alley. Hold on." She darted away and returned with
the pallet towed smoothly behind her. Over an arm she had a
couple of blankets as bedding. Surra was laid on the
blanket-cushioned lifter top. Laris produced a set of bars which
slotted into the top. They formed a low surround to prevent Surra
from rolling off. Storm pushed the pallet and it glided forward.
The girl tucked the blanket edges over the cat and stepped
back. "Good. Thank you." Storm
approved. She flushed and nodded. The small cavalcade headed
for the gates. Once there, a hovercar engulfed Storm and Surra,
with Tani and her coyotes, who were still refusing to move more
than a pace from her. Logan hauled Laris into the next vehicle.
Prauo joined them, sitting comfortably between, to Logan's
amusement. Versha and Anders entered his official transport and
powered smoothly after the other two vehicles. Dedran brought up
in the rear in a fourth car with watchful guards. They reached
the Under-governor's offices and Anders halted them
all. "I think we should do best
by taking a break right now. Go bathe, eat, drink, and rest.
We'll meet tonight at eight-hour. By that time Versha and I may
have answers to some of the questions you'd like to ask." He
smiled at Dedran. "This does not apply to you, I fear. It is you
who shall be providing the answers." He nodded to Dedran's
guards. "Take him to the probe room and begin. I'll
follow." They scattered, to
reassemble seven hours later, clean, respectably garbed, and
hungry for information. Anders was waiting, his face alight with
results. "I'll make this fast. We
have preliminary information which clears some of the mysteries.
Briefly—Dedran's boss was a guild patron.
They planned to use stolen team beasts and Cregar to build new
teams. The guild patron intended to send these out as a sort of
guild survey to find new usable planets. The whole circus was
never more than a front. While they worked toward that plan they
also used it in other ways." He saw Laris draw back
slightly. "Yes, he's talked about you
and your friend there." He nodded to Prauo. "Before we began
deep-probe Dedran tried to persuade us that the espionage,
sabotage, and thefts were your idea. However I have seen the
Kowar record copies. Dedran's acts began long before you joined
the circus and you were twelve when you did so. Under probe he
confirmed you were illegally bonded and under duress and his
orders, not the reverse. I don't quite see you as the mesmerizing
criminal mastermind he's tried to claim anyway." Laris faced him, nerving
herself. "I'll swear oath and take probe to back it. I was afraid
for Prauo's life and my own." "I believe you. I accept
your oath but I'll have to have probe records for Trastor's
governor and patrol High Command. Don't worry. For those who
speak the truth, probe isn't dangerous—or even painful. We can do that
now." He picked up papers and shuffled them. "Apart from that we
had another informant in the guild's lower level. They confirm
there is now considerable infighting going on. Dedran's patron
has fallen. Other patrons would like to lay hands on Dedran. It's
been made plain his best hope of life is to stay right here and
talk about everything he's ever done or known." "And?" Logan
asked. Anders grinned. "And once he
understood that, the problem is going to be shutting him up any
time soon. We're encouraging that. We have cheated him in one
way. Somehow he'd taken the notion that if he cooperates he won't
go to rehab. I'm afraid he's wrong. With even half of what we
know he has done he already has a room booked. Or—if he chooses, a clean death.
Either way he won't be merely jailed or let go." Laris shivered. To have the
personality wiped. To be a baby again and to relearn, then go
free but never know who you'd been. That was death and maybe the
worse sort. She shivered again. She guessed Dedran would choose a
clean death in the end. At least if he did it would mean she'd
never see even his body again. Anders moved toward the
door. "Laris, come with me. We can
have this over in an hour. If you others would care to wait..."
They did so. He was back with Laris in the promised hour, both
smiling. Anders carried papers. He sat, handing the papers to
Versha as he did so. The patrol officer took center
stage. "I've conferred with Jared
and we agree. Laris, the probe confirms that all you did was done
as a bond-servant under orders and under threat of death or
injury to you or your beast. Therefore you are deemed guiltless.
This, so long as it cannot be subsequently proved against you
that you yourself were the deliberate cause, without legal
excuse, of death or injury to any other." The words rolled out in
solemn tones. Versha was giving the law as backed by the
patrol. "Storm witnessed the
transfer of all property owned by the man Jason Regan, known also
as Jas Cregar. It is accepted that this verbal transfer is a
legal will and that you inherit as was the dead man's intent. No
reason is seen why you should remain on Trastor. The probe clears
you. You are free to leave when and to where you wish. Monies
inherited may be transferred at your demand." She glanced at the
papers and spoke again slowly. "The beast known as Prauo is
deemed to be your property until such time as you may decide
otherwise. The patrol has no interest in laying claim to the
animal. Nor has the circus, now listed as a criminal entity in
and of itself, any rights in this matter. Your bond held by Aldo
M'ranne Dedran is hereby canceled since proof has been advanced
that such bonding was illegal. This judgment is the judgment of
the patrol in the name and person of Sind Illisho Versha. So
shall it be!" Her hand struck down on the table and she
relaxed. Laris sat there stunned.
Logan grabbed her, lifted the girl to her feet, and danced her
around the room. "Don't you get it? You're
free. Anything Cregar left is yours. No one can take Prauo from
you." He slowed, looking down at her. "You aren't still worried,
are you?" Laris shook her head. "No.
But Logan, I did terrible things. I helped Cregar steal Storm and
Tani's animals. You were hurt because of me. And that isn't all."
She fished under her tunic and began to draw up the ring. "Cregar
gave me this. I guessed where it came from but I loved it so
much. Take it, and if you don't want to know me, I understand."
She dropped the ring into his hand. Storm took it from his
brother. "The ring of
Walks-Soft-as-a-Puma. Brad will be happy to see that back
again." "I'm sorry," Laris choked.
"I'm sorry." Prauo moved to stand with her. In Storm's mind words
and images formed to combine a plea. *She has fought. Against the
camps, her bond-master, those who would have ill-used her.* Swift
flicking pictures of Laris cowering under blows, the sensation of
hunger, a blast of fear and pain. *Her life has been only strife
until now. She had no place of her own. None save me to love for
long and long.* Now a black cloud of lonely misery was sent, to
pierce Storm with Laris's remembered emotions. *Do you now cast
her out? What of your path? Has it been so free of wrongdoing. So
smoothly perfect?* *No.* *Then as the dark woman
judged, do you also judge, with honor and mercy.* Storm closed
his fingers about the ring and his other hand was laid on Laris's
arm. "When the war finished I
came to Arzor," he said softly. "I planned to kill a man I
believed had betrayed me and mine. I found a man with honor but
shut my eyes. Yet in the end I opened them to truth. Because of
that man's mercy I stand now with my own family. With a place.
Long ago a wise one of the people said that a gift should be
passed on, not back." He turned Laris a little, so that she faced
him. "You kept Surra from dying,
took care of Hing and her family well." He took in a deep breath.
"For my part I forgive anything done against me in your name. It
is dust on the wind. Forgotten." Laris stared. Tani smiled
down at her. "You cared for Minou and Ferarre. The clan accepts
blood-price. Buy something of the sky here and gift it to them."
She laughed softly. "I know where you could buy a meteor. A small
black sky-stone. The clan would forgive much for that gift to the
Thunder-talker. It is a thing of great power. They would forgive
the debt. None of them were wounded and they took four
bow-hands." "I'd pay happily." Laris
gulped. "Could I afford it?" "Oh, indeed. You have not
yet seen Versha's report on Cregar." She would save until later
the news that the man had been kin. Tani held up a list. "Your
friend was wealthy. In the hiding place of which you told us
there was a disk. It holds bank records. I have spoken to one who
knows. With all gathered together you inherit..." She spoke a sum
which left the girl gaping. "You can afford a sky-stone. And land
too, if you wished." With slow incredulous hope the girl moved to
gaze at Logan. He held her. "For my blood, you pay time.
Come back to Arzor. Stay with the family three months. Ride with
us. Know the land. If you choose then to stay or leave, any debt
to me is paid." Storm swept Tani hastily out of the room after
her final words. "I think they'd like to be
alone, dearling." Tani, catching one quick glimpse of Laris
locked in Logan's arms, agreed. It took time. Laris
submitted to a longer probe session for information. Anders's
friendly banker sorted out finances and transferred credits: A
final sum which would buy a meteor—and quite a lot of land should
Laris wish for the latter. Five tigerbats returned to
semi-freedom on Lereyne. The Thunder-talker's bracelets were
found hidden in Dedran's quarters on the circus ship. Tani would
return them along with a trophy lock of hair from the three:
Baris, Ideena, and Dedran, and the tale of how they died. The
clan would approve. But before they took ship
back to Arzor Laris stood alone on a hill and allowed ashes to
sift through her hands. She knew now by whose hand she had been
aided. Jason Regan Trehannan, who had taken his grandfather's
surname to honor that old soldier when his grandson enlisted.
Jason Trehannan who had become Jason Regan, then Jas Cregar, and
who in the end had redeemed his honor. To the silence of the
surrounding trees she spoke softly. "Be free of your sorrow and
pain, Cregar. May the spirits of your team find you now. Let them
walk with you so you are no more alone. May you find also my
mother, your sister who loved you, Uncle. And be doubly
comforted. All debts are paid." She descended the hill to Logan's
arms. The ship seemed to move like
a snail through space. They landed on Arzor at sunrise. Laris
looked up to see the lavender sky lighting up the land as the
warm air brought them the scent of falwood blossoms. The girl
could feel her tension drain away. The land took her to its
heart, making her its own. She hunted with Tani, laughed, teased,
and rode with Logan. Storm unbent sufficiently to show her the
frawn herd. Brad talked to her. Telling
her of Ishan, of the people from Cornwall, Ireland, and Brittany
who had gone there to bring back their language and some of the
old ways. Then the Xik had come and Ishan was a burned-out cinder
orbiting in death, but before that happened many settlers had
moved to DuIshan, the new world settled from the mother planet.
It was from DuIshan that Mandy, Tani's paraowl, came. One day
perhaps, Laris could visit DuIshan and see her origins for
herself. Quietly too Brad and Storm
attempted to find out something about Prauo. Was he a kidnapped
cub from another race, or a gene-spliced experiment? Whatever or
whoever he was none could deny his intelligence. It made no
difference to the big cat. Home was where Laris lived. She was
his sister; he would abide by the choices she made for them
both. Twelve weeks after her
return to Arzor she rode out with Logan to sit her horse on the
edge of the basin. In the far distance High Peaks showed purple
as Prauo's eyes. It called to her. The rocks, the high hills, the
dry scent of the desert fringe, the solitude, and the silence.
Logan watched as she gazed over the scene. He spoke
softly. "I won't hold you if you
feel you can't stay here. But if you wanted to stay and you liked
the idea, we could buy land together." He kept his voice neutral,
he'd not pressure her. "Do you want to leave?" She said nothing for many
minutes, allowing her heart and Prauo's to decide. At last she
turned to him. "Home is where you are. Why
would I leave our home?" she said. About the
Authors For more than fifty years,
Andre Norton, "one of the most
distinguished living SF and fantasy writers" (Booklist),
has been penning bestselling novels that have earned her a unique
place in the hearts and minds of millions of readers worldwide.
She has been honored with the World Fantasy Convention's Life
Achievement Award and with the Nebula Grand Master Award from her
peers in the Science Fiction Writers of America. Works set in her
fabled Witch World, as well as the Time Traders, the Solar Queen,
and Beast Master series, to name but a few in her great oeuvre,
have made her "one of the most popular authors of our time"
{Publishers Weekly). She lives in Murfreesboro, Tennessee,
where she presides over High Hallack, a writers' resource and
retreat. More can be learned about Ms. Norton's work and High
Hallack at www.andre-norton.org. Lyn
McConchie has
written many books, including collaborations with Andre Norton,
among them The Key of the Keplian, a Witch World novel,
and Beast Master's Ark. She lives in Norsewood, New
Zealand, where she writes and runs a farm. Since the dreaded Xik
destroyed Earth, the corps of Beast Masters and the animal teams
with which they have telepathic rapport have served as sentinels
against the Xik and other threats to colony worlds throughout the
galaxy. Now a conspiracy with ties
to the Thieves Guild is trying to kidnap the Beast Masters' team
animals. On one world after another, they are attacking Beast
Masters and targeting their animals, leaving a trail of dead or
wounded Beast Masters and their animals in their wake. They
haven't yet succeeded in capturing one alive ... but they are
still trying, and they're becoming more desperate—and bolder. Laris is a young woman who
works for a space-faring circus, a bonded slave to its manager.
An orphan with a troubled past, Laris is gifted with animals, a
valuable asset to the circus and to her boss. But she's learned
that somehow there's a connection between him and the Thieves
Guild, and also the attempted abductions of Beast Masters'
animals. She also knows that if her boss finds out what she has
discovered, it would make her a problem, and he usually disposes
of problems. When the circus lands on
Arzor, home to Beast Masters Hosteen and Tani Storm, Laris feels
a kinship to them and to Hosteen's family, the Quades. She
realizes, however, that she may be endangering them by exposing
them to the dark interest of her boss and his ill-intentioned
friends. Hosteen and Tani like Laris, too, as does Logan Quade.
She would give anything to tell them her dangerous secret but
cannot. Because she knows that her friendship with the Beast
Masters could be their downfall, as well as her own! Andre
Norton, named a
Grand Master by the Science Fiction Writers of America and the
recipient of a Life Achievement World Fantasy Award, is the
author of more than one hundred novels of science fiction and
fantasy adventure. Beloved by legions of readers the world over,
she has thrilled generations with such series as Beast Master,
Time Traders, The Solar Queen, Witch World, and others.
She continues to write, and presides over a unique writers'
resource, High Hallack, in Murfreesboro, Tennessee. Visit her Web
site at www.andre-norton.org. Lyn
McConchie is
the author, with Andre Norton, of Beast Master's Ark and
other novels, as well as her own fiction. A native of New
Zealand, she has been awarded the Sir Julius Vogel Award for Best
Science Fiction or Fantasy Novel of 2002 by a New Zealander, for
Beast Master's Ark. BEAST MASTER'S
CIRCUS Andre Norton And Lyn McConchie This is a work of fiction.
All the characters and events portrayed in this novel are either
fictitious or are used fictitiously. BEAST MASTER'S
CIRCUS Copyright © 2004 by Andre Norton and Lyn
McConchie All rights reserved,
including the right to reproduce this book, or portions thereof,
in any form. This book is printed on
acid-free paper. Edited by James
Frenkel A Tor Book Published by Tom Doherty
Associates, LLC 175 Fifth Avenue New York, NY
10010 www.tor.com Tor® is a registered trademark of Tom
Doherty Associates, LLC. Library of Congress
Cataloging-in-Publication Data Norton, Andre. Beast master's circus /
Andre Norton and Lyn McConchie.—1st ed. p. cm. "A Tom Doherty Associates
book." ISBN
0-765-30042-7 1. Storm, Hosteen
(Fictitious character)—Fiction. 2. Human-animal
communication—Fiction. 3. Life on other
planets—Fiction. 4. Circus
performers—Fiction. 5. Space
colonies—Fiction. I. McConchie, Lyn,
1946—II. Title. PS3527.O632B57
2004 813'.52—dc22 2003060697 First Edition: February
2004 Printed in the United States
of America 0987654321 Dedication To the cats whose lives have
enlivened my own reading for so many years. To Midnight Louie,
and Carole Nelson Douglas. To Koko and Yum Yum, and Lilian Jackson
Braun. To Solomon, Sheba, Sealy, ShebaLu, and Saska, and
Doreen Tovey; and to the many cats, real and fictional, of Andre Norton
(Chang-Un in particular). May they find Prauo a worthy
successor. —L.M. Acknowledgments To Jim Frenkel, Tor editor,
who edited this book with considerable patience despite dealing
with an author who can't spell or punctuate, and has no
computer-savvy whatsoever. Thanks. To the computer-repair firm
of StanCo, who rushed out several times to fix my printer on the
spot so I could produce this work. Thanks, Stan and
Andrew. And to the one, the only,
the ubiquitous, Premier Ocispot Tigerman—my Ocicat—on some of whose traits and
abilities I based the character of Prauo, and without whose
loving assistance this work would have probably been finished a
lot sooner. Thanks, guys, I couldn't
have done it without you. Chapter One Laris crouched over the new
animal. It was gasping for breath still, but that would not last
long. The shock of its injuries and the pain of losing what meant
most to it were draining both its strength and will to live. Even
as she worked, it gave one final, long, slow breath—and as that was released so was
the poor beast's life. She felt tears come to her eyes. She'd
tried. She had. But that would buy her nothing from those who
employed her. Nor did it. A moment later a
whip sang, the lash burned across her thin shoulders, and she
cried out, twisting away. "Dedran, no! I did my best.
I can't work miracles." She glared up at him. "If
your people brought me anything but damaged goods mind-broken by
the way they were taken, I might have a chance." The Circus Master glared
down. Dedran was a lean, hard-looking man. His hair was that odd
shade of blond that looked almost white but his skin was a
weathered brown. He'd fought with the Ishan forces until his
planet was destroyed almost five years earlier. What he'd been
before that no one knew—although they made guesses which
could well have been right. Dedran had never given
anyone the impression he was rigidly honest. The Ishan forces had
not cared, their leader had taken the man in to fight, not to
attend league meetings. In fact, Dedran had been a criminal
already allied with the rising Thieves Guild. He was a clever man
with ideas. One of which had been that it was safer to be given a
weapon and encouraged to fight against the Xik than to hide
without arms and wait to be slaughtered. He'd bided his time,
survived the destruction of his world, and made sure of some very
portable and valuable loot as he escaped the ruins of his
planet. He'd set up the circus after
Ishan. Spent the two years before the war ended sorting out acts
and people to work for him. He seemed to have enough money to do
it without problems. Within the circus though there were hints
that he owned only a part of it—that others had funded the
business as a cover. Laris could believe that. The circus had
swept her up four years ago. She'd been a starving refugee from
one of the worlds cleared by the Xik, or so she believed. She'd
been barely twelve, and remembered little of her first years. The
years after the loss of her home had been filled with dimly
recalled moves: being bundled into a ship and dumped on another
world with no more than the clothes she stood up in and her
mother, who wept. She thought she might have been four or five
then. Another move and another, and her mother was gone. Another
and still yet another until at last she was twelve and in a camp
with many others, none of whom she knew and most of whom spoke
other languages or the one-speech with strange accents. She'd
fought first to survive, then to escape, sensing that if she
stayed within the camp she would become as hopeless as
they. Laris had a keen
intelligence but had learned enough by the time she was alone to
hide much of what she knew. She looked younger than her true age
and could appear younger still. People were more careless around
a child—both with talk and small
change. She'd found part-time
employment in a pet shop run by an old man. He wasn't unkind but
he expected a full day's work for his credits. Sometimes the work
was almost too much for the light-boned, underfed girl but she
always managed. She loved the beasts, and when he saw how well
they responded to her the owner gave her more responsibility.
Then he died and her way of escape appeared closed. There were other roads open
but none that she would willingly take. At twelve she appeared to
be only nine or ten, and in any great city there was a market for
that. Had she agreed, there were several, including Mercer, the
camp boss, who'd have found her employment. Laris was small and
appeared fragile. Yet for all that she showed promise of becoming
not so much pretty as elegant. Her movements were graceful, her
cap of dark hair complemented the dark brown of her eyes, and her
skin was a warm, creamy, faintly olive shade. Her manner was
self-contained and she unbent to few. Why bother? Camp after camp
had swept away her mother, her memories, and any earlier friends
she had made. Now she walked alone but for the one friend she'd
kept these past few years. Prauo, whom she cherished and trusted,
loved as she'd had none to love for so long. Dedran was back. "Don't sit
there dreaming, you fool. Get that carcass cleaned up, take
samples for me, and make sure no one will find it afterward." He
turned to leave, then swung back. "Your cat, he'll be well enough
to perform tonight?" "Yes—at least—here?" Dedran smiled hungrily.
"Elsewhere, a climb maybe." Laris considered. Prauo had
been ill from another growth spurt but he was recovering. "So
long as the climb isn't too exhausting and he can rest once it's
done." Her employer nodded. "It's a
straight job. If you and the cat do it well I may even
toss you a half credit or two." He laughed and strolled away,
ignoring the look Laris gave him. Even after four years she
sometimes wondered how well she'd done to sign on with Dedran's
Circus. But she'd had to get out of the camp. With the pet shop
owner's death her one obvious avenue of escape had
closed. She'd despaired; then
Mercer, the camp boss, had come to her smiling and she'd cringed.
It meant no good for someone when the boss of the camp grinned so
cheerfully. But, incredibly, it had meant good for her. He'd
towered over her, smirking down. "You Laris? The one who's
good with animals?" She'd nodded. Mercer nodded back. "You don't
look like much. Maybe that's an advantage. Come with me." She
followed, hiding the inward sneer at his pretense of not knowing
her. He'd remembered her well enough last year when he'd wanted
her to accept work in a city place. He'd thought she looked like
a lot then, a lot of credits. Now what did he have in
mind? He'd taken her to Dedran.
Both men had eyed her coldly. "This! You reckon this miserable
thing'll be any use to me?" Mercer nodded. "She's been
working in old man Plaistrin's shop the last year. He told me
once she was real good with the beasts. He was considering a
contract. Reckon he'd a done it if'n he hadn't died." Laris felt
her heart jump. So near to escape and the old fool had to go and
die. But what was she doing here, another job with
animals? Dedran snorted. "All right.
I'll test her. If she passes I'll take her on." He smiled
viciously. "Five-year bond and you get the bond money. I suppose
she's yours to bond?" Mercer looked at her and
Laris understood. In the camp there was always talk; some escaped
it in various ways, and sometimes they returned to see friends or
family. From them and their tales she had learned all she could
about conditions of freedom. What it meant to be bonded. If she
were ever in that position she must know what she would receive
and what she could legally ask for. Here and now she could speak
out. Deny that Mercer had the right to give a bond for her.
Dedran would walk away and once she was back in the camp, she'd
pay. But if she agreed she might have hope. She'd be out of the
camp, employed even if she was under bond. After five years she
could leave with an honorably canceled contract saying she'd had
a good job these past five years. Or she might be able to stay,
with a new contract and good pay if she'd proved her
worth. Better yet, under bond she
must be decently fed. Given respectable clothing. A bond-servant
could not be summarily judged or too badly beaten. There were
always those who'd use too clear evidence of abuse against the
abuser. None of these things were hers in the camp; she'd be
better off bonded. She'd looked up innocently.
"Yes, Honored Sir, the Noble Mercer can sell me if'n he wishes. I
work hard an' I'm good with the beasts." "You'll sign the
bond?" "I'll sign," Laris agreed.
And she had. In front of an overstuffed pompous official, whom
she guessed was collecting his share of the money. He'd attested
that she appeared to be sixteen. Laris knew that for a lie, but
she had to be sixteen for the bond so she signed where she was
told and agreed when she was asked, that yes, she was sixteen
years old. After that she went with the
two men to a building. She could feel her nerves tightening as
they approached the door. It was possible that the talk of
animals had been a trick. That Mercer had sold her for another
purpose. But the smell as they entered reassured her, as did the
animal sounds which rose in the rank air. Mercer led them to a
cage at the back. He gestured at the inhabitant. "Lereyne tigerbat. The
brute's gone into a decline and I paid high. Get in there and
rouse it, make it eat." Laris sucked in a silent
breath and bit down on a grin. The tigerbat had a very nasty
reputation on its home world which was quite justified. Tigerbat
swarms had stripped humans to the bone in minutes, even through
reinforced clothing. In swarm, the beasts had no fear and would
continue the attack despite heavy losses. Lereyne settlers had
almost wiped them out over three generations and now they were
seldom seen, although the stories remained. But somewhere along the
line, she didn't quite recall where or when, she'd learned to
read. Old Plaistrin had owned quite a library on other-world
beasts. He'd loved to talk too, and he'd been both fond of his
merchandise and knowledgeable. She'd read and listened, soaked up
everything she could. She knew something about the tigerbats. She
glanced around. The two men shifted to block her path and she
snorted. "I'm not trying to run. I
want a brush." Dedran looked blank. "A
brush? What kind of brush?" "A grooming brush," Laris
snapped. She saw one tossed on the top of another cage and
reached. Dedran allowed it. With the brush secured she turned
back and looked at the door. "Am I supposed to walk
through plasteel bars or something?" Dedran's look halted Mercer
even as he snarled and drew back his fist. "No, I want to see
this. If she's as good as she thinks she is I want her in one
piece." He swung the door open and
his eyes were amused. "In you go, Gracious Lady. You leave once
that brute has eaten—you or its food, I don't much
care which." Laris ignored him, stepping
quietly toward the huddled animal. It whimpered quietly in its
sleep. Tigerbats were swarm animals. To keep one alone was to
watch it die of loneliness, something Dedran appeared to be
unaware of. Moving slowly and quietly Laris swept the brush down
the matted fur. She worked gently, untangling the long pelt,
grooming until the tigerbat lifted its head to stare at her. Then
she took up a piece of the meat. The tigerbat opened its mouth,
revealing the massive fangs within. But the feeling it gave off
to her was one of pleasure. One had come to relieve its solitary
state. One who groomed the matted fur as a swarm member
should. As the men waited she fed
the animal until it had eaten enough. She knew she must not
overfeed one which had not eaten well in too long. She returned
to the grooming while the tigerbat lay there blinking blissfully.
When she stood it moved to cling to the bars, wings furled over
its narrow shoulders. Yellow eyes watched her
hopefully. She patted it. "Don't worry.
I'll be back, I think." Dedran nodded at her before turning to
Mercer. He counted out credits into the camp boss's eager
palm. "She'll do." The camp boss hurried away,
leaving Dedran to look at Laris. "You know animals, it seems.
What else do you know?" "I can read an' write,"
Laris told him, watching his surprise. "I work hard. And I can
keep my mouth shut an' my eyes an' ears open." Dedran grinned briefly, a
mere twist of his thin lips. "Then you may do well here. What do
you read?" "Books about animals. So's I
can learn more about them." He nodded thoughtfully.
"I've got no objections to that. Do your work and when it's done
you can access the library." Dedran had been as good as
his word. In the last four years Laris had read freely, more
freely than her master had known. There were ways to earn a
credit or two as the circus traveled. And ways on-planet to
untraceably access information once one had those credits. With
the war over, Dedran had purchased an old cargo ship, packed his
beasts and staff within, and upped ship. Laris guessed he had
other reasons beyond the claimed one of bringing entertainment to
the human-settled planets. Sometimes they stopped so briefly they
could manage only a handful of sold-out shows. Clearly they could
have stayed at a profit, but they moved on. At other times they
played to half-or quarter-filled houses and must have lost money,
but they remained several weeks. It wasn't a large circus. There
were some thirty beasts, many which were no bigger than a Terran
dog. In fact, they had two of those who did an act with two
Trastorian carra. Later the carra did a clown act with their
trainer and the dogs often joined that as well. Dedran saw to it that mostly
the animals were decently fed, housed, and well-treated. On her
own initiative Laris had taught herself and the carra a trapeze
act. Dedran had been pleased with that and her hard work, so he
rarely struck her. He wasn't as kind to the forty or so people
who worked for him. Often they left when and as they could, and
were quickly replaced. Some seemed merely to vanish with no prior
word of their intent to depart. Laris had swiftly seen that
some of those who left were the ones who talked too much, who
nosed into Dedran's business. But not always. Once they began to
travel there were frequently people who'd do anything to escape
their world. Dedran would take them on, for a trip to the next.
By that time they had to have worked out a dangerous act to
perform. On the new world they would be expected to appear twice
a day. Most took too many risks and died or were crippled. They
would be left behind when the circus moved on. But it was good business.
The crowds came to watch someone die. Dedran took them on without
pay until they had proved themselves. There were always two or
three on the ship working hard between planets to earn a place.
Over four years many of his staff had come and gone. Some others
left because they would not bow to Dedran's blows. Laris had no
option in that, so she remained. But the blows weren't that
regular, and the food was good, the provided clothing
respectable. The girl had grown and filled out. Still others came
and went and she made no real friends. Laris knew only one other
who'd been there longer than she. That one approached her
now. "Did we lose it?" His foot
stirred the stiffening body. Her voice was steady. "Of
course. It was too damaged to survive." "Yes. A pity. We needed
it." Neither said more but both
understood that the damage mentioned had not been that to body
alone. He took a container from his pocket and drank. The scent
of oranges drifted to her; Laris kept silent. If Cregar wanted to
preserve himself in Naranje that was his decision. Dedran never
seemed to care. And for all he drank—and it was a lot—Cregar never became less than
stolidly taciturn before others. Once she'd tried to talk to
him. She'd been with Dedran only a few months, and watching
Cregar she'd guessed he'd had training with animals. She'd asked
about it and he'd turned to look at her, a terrible stare
compounded of such rage and pain she'd never asked again. Over
the years she'd watched him and wondered. He seemed to have no
connection with beasts, no desire to touch or love, yet he knew
the way they thought and would react. He was capable of training
them to do things which appeared impossible. He'd trained many of the
animals they had now. And unlike humans, the animals did not hate
or fear him. This new one had been brought in after midnight.
Cregar had dumped it in a sack by her tent and woken her to tend
it. He'd been a little drunk and a lot angry. He muttered about
stupid fools who couldn't obey a simple order. Then he'd snarled
at her to do what she could, and stamped away. She'd lost the
fight. She ignored him as he stood drinking. She had to take the
samples of tissue Dedran had ordered. She took them gently,
mourning over the body. Cregar was often away,
traveling ahead of the circus. When he met up with them again he
often brought a new beast. Those he brought rarely survived their
abduction and always it was her job to care for them, take
samples when they died. In her reading she'd come
across word of beast masters. Those who had the gift of
communication with animals. Terra had taken and trained the human
halves of the teams, and had bred genetically altered beasts to
match with the chosen humans. Laris suspected Cregar might
have been a beast master once. What had happened, she did not
know. She knew only that now he seemed always to be in pain, not
of body but of mind. Both she and her cat could sense it dimly
whenever Cregar was around. She finished taking her samples and
struggled to lift the beast. The circus had a simple method of
disposal. The ship's engines were
typical of older freighters. They had no real speed but were far
cheaper to run than the newer models. Ideal for a circus with its
tons of litter each day. They would run on any form of matter fed
to them. This carcass would become atoms just as soon as she
reached the ship. Laris suspected that a few people had gone the
same way. She was sure she would have been one had she failed to
pass the tigerbat test and been killed. Cregar walked away. She
glared after him. If he must steal these beasts couldn't he at
least see to it that his hirelings took more care? Bad enough
being snatched from their human, to whom they were bonded deeply.
But this one had been brutally struck about the head and would
likely not have survived those injuries. Nor had it wished to.
She'd felt its pain, the emptiness, and guessed Cregar's men had
killed the human. She swore bitterly under her breath as she
carried the body to the ship. According to her reading the
beast master teams were few and far between. Maybe fifty had been
trained at first. Another dozen or so in training had broken free
before the final Xik thrust which had left Terra a smoking
cinder. Most of the trained teams had perished in the hard
fighting shortly before that time. But even the partly trained
teams were bonded. That intimate emotional and mental connection
was set before the physical training began. In fact, with the later
teams the bond had been set far more deeply than with those first
used. It was an experiment which, Laris felt, had been folly. The
novice teams were bonded until death, but they lacked the
military training which would help them resist Cregar's attack.
Thus it was that Cregar targeted them, but also for that reason
that he lost beast after beast to the trauma of its master's
death. She shivered as she placed
the animal in the matter chamber and activated the turntable.
Dedran was determined to have live beasts from such a team. They
had proved over and over that they could not use beasts from the
trainee teams. She was afraid she could guess where his eyes
would turn next. But surely there were none left of the trained
teams which had fought and mostly died for Terra. Behind her Dedran spoke.
"Prepare for departure, girl. I won't be needing you and the cat
after all. Get the cages in. We up ship tonight." "We have a show booked for
tonight. They'll talk if we cancel." She paused then added, "Do
we want talk and attention drawn to us?" His eyes narrowed
thoughtfully. "True. All right. Start preparing after the show.
We'll leave tomorrow morning as soon as we're packed
up." For a moment Laris wondered
if this was the time to jump ship. But it wasn't a good planet on
which to take that chance. Lereyne would be better. In her mind
another's eyes opened and looked out on the bleak, chill
landscape. Agreement came. There was always time to consider. But
to act hastily could mean unnecessary suffering. As she bustled about making
ready for the show and then departure, Laris allowed that other
to see through her eyes. Cregar didn't know how far they had come
since Laris had found a tiny, shivering, starving cub three years
gone on a world far off the beaten track. She'd taken the poor
beast in, cared for him, loved him, and then found in him growing
abilities which mixed strangely with the girl who loved him.
Nowadays Prauo and Laris were useful to Dedran. The circus boss
had many irons in the fire. They'd taken minute tissue samples
from Prauo several times; Laris had been forced to permit that.
But she smiled secretly on overhearing Dedran's rage. "They can't produce
anything. Damned beast we grow ends up mindless over and over.
And it doesn't grow larger." He'd ranted on and Laris had slipped
away in silence. After that she'd carefully
hidden other advances between herself and her friend. After his
last growth spurt some eighteen months back Prauo had begun to be
able to use her eyes. Not merely a bond, but a direct linkage.
Shortly thereafter Laris had found she could do the same and see
what the young cat saw. It had enabled them to please Dedran to a
larger extent and he would suffer no interference by others in
case his valuable asset was damaged beyond further
use. Laris did her show in the
first half of the performance, a flamboyant turn on the trapeze
with the carra. The act was half serious, half clowning, always
skilled, and greeted as ever by loud laughter. Then she changed
into a boy's costume and disguise to enter the tigerbat cage.
Dedran had found four more of the creatures in the intervening
years but her special friend was the oldest and largest of the
tigerbats. He ruled the miniature swarm. As part of her act they
acted out a tiny play of a lad who found one of the creatures
trapped and aided it. He was then rescued in turn when a swarm
struck. Throughout her act there were gasps and cries from the
audience. She finished, sent the tigerbats from the center cage,
and turned to bow deeply. The applause was generous and Dedran
nodded approvingly as he passed her. She'd been an excellent
investment. Laris watched as he ran
lightly into the ring. She knew what he'd thought. She made sure
he felt that way by keeping her head down, working hard, and
being utterly discreet. What he did not know didn't hurt him. He
did know of the small amount of quarter and half credits she had
hidden in her cabin. Dedran would not have been pleased to learn
that she had a far larger stack of credits saved about which he
knew nothing. Enough to keep her and Prauo for many months at the
subsistence level of most worlds should she decide to
flee. He'd have been still less
pleased to know that she read as widely as she did. She regularly
invested a credit here and there in unmonitored library access.
Using her reading, overheard comments, newscasts, and the work
Dedran sometimes required of Laris and her cat, she'd started to
build a theory—that Dedran worked for the Thieves
Guild. The war and destruction of two planets, the devastation of
many others, had not been good for guild profits. And even worse had been the
patrol, a neutral force to monitor human-settled worlds and
crewed often by ex-military and survey officers. It had been
started soon after the human race had exploded outward. When war
began it had been scaled back. In the three years since war's end
though, it had grown again, and with such a reputation that even
some worlds with races other than human asked for the patrol's
intervention at times. As a result a trickle of people of other
races were being accepted for patrol training. And the patrol did
not like the Thieves Guild. Laris changed to her
ordinary clothing, spent time with Prauo, and then left
reluctantly. She must begin the pulldown. She got it started but
managed to disappear long enough to access a newscast. Her mouth
stretched in an unpleasant grin. No wonder Dedran had tried to
call off tonight's performance. The headlines were screaming
about a murder. Since the murdered man had
been not only an ex-beast master trainee but also the nephew of a
very influential member of the government, the local surface
patrol were out in force. Laris slid through the crowd and
returned to her work thinking hard. She dared not let those here
find the tissue samples. She'd be implicated. Dedran and Cregar
would bribe their way free and up ship. She'd be the one left and
blamed. But she could not allow
Dedran to know that she knew of the hunt. Nor could she hide the
samples in any place which might alert him that she had other
hiding places he had not found. She drifted onto the ship
unobtrusively, retrieved the samples, and placed them on the
matter turntable under a heap of cage cleanings. Then she went
back to her work. It was close to dawn when spaceport security
descended upon the Queen of the Circus. Whoever Dedran
usually paid off, it hadn't worked this time. They began at the entry port
and worked forward using some instrument which they clearly
expected would tell them if anything was to be found. Laris
glanced at Dedran. His face was blank but his body language, to
one who'd known him four years, bordered on desperation. He
caught her eye questioningly. She allowed her lip to curl a
fraction in reply. His tense posture slacked a fraction as he
nodded at her. She relaxed. Good. He'd
accept the samples' destruction. It was what he wanted, given
this over-thorough search. She opened the tigerbat cage as
requested, persuaded the four to move to a second enclosure while
security began to check the first cage. The fifth tigerbat caught
her tiny hand signal. He spun on wing-knuckles and fled down the
corridor. She raced in pursuit. They spun past the engine-room
door; she slowed, glanced back, good, they were out of sight for
a few seconds. Her hand shot out, palmed the door ajar, pressed a
switch, and thumbed the door shut again. Then she was back into their
view and she moved up, cornering the animal at the end of the
corridor. She pretended to strike him several times while he
uttered pitiful cries. It was part of one of their acts and he
trusted her. He cowered as he had been taught. Laris led him back
to his cage. Security got to the matter chamber and found what
they had found elsewhere—nothing. Laris breathed out. Their
machine could find no trace of samples, now only component atoms.
She watched them leave, Dedran ushering them politely. She'd have
to admit what she'd done but she thought he'd accept the loss of
samples at this time. Chapter Two Dedran was coldly furious,
but not at Laris. His anger was reserved for those who'd taken
his money and failed to keep port security from his ship. He'd
lost the samples, and worse, the authorities were still
suspicious of him even though nothing had been found. He raged at
Cregar in a corner where only the girl could overhear. "You deadglow, I wanted the
man knocked out, unconscious, not killed. That way we could have
had a live beast." Cregar's voice was cold.
"Don't be more stupid than you can help, Dedran. He was a beast
master. Alive, you couldn't have hidden one of his animals from
him anywhere. That's what being a beast master is." "You could have left him
injured. Head injuries would have stopped that." Cregar snorted. "Fer Crats
sake, Dedran. Injuries would have stopped it so long as he was
sick. His uncle would likely have been even quicker to start
searching with a half-dead nephew urging him on. And I can tell
you somethin' else the doctors here would have told Uncle. That
the boy would get better faster if the animal was found. And if
we killed it and just took samples once they started searching,
the boy would have felt it die. He'd have gone crazy. So don't
call me names. You were the one who insisted we try here. I told
you it was risky." Laris saw Dedran glance
around; she shrank back further into the tigerbat den. "Sure it
was risky." Dedran's voice was lowered. "But you know who gives
the orders. Want to argue with them?" Cregar's reply was brief.
"No." "Right, then we try Lereyne.
There's one of the original lot there. He was left with only two
of his team and he recently lost a beast in some accident. The
boss says we try now, before he loses the last one. There's
another on Arzor and we do that next." "Isn't that gonna be a touch
obvious? Our ship lands on Meril and a beast master gets killed.
Our ship lands on Lereyne, and a beast master's animal gets
snatched." It was Dedran's turn to
snort. "No one's that stupid except you." He was half turned from
Cregar as he spoke. He saw nothing, but Laris, peeping from the
den saw the other man's face. If that was her, she wouldn't be
talking to Cregar like that. The man was a killer and right now
he'd like to kill Dedran. She drew back deeper into the den. If
either knew that she was listening, her life wouldn't be worth a
tenth credit. Dedran continued. "The guild
says that with all the fuss on Meril there's been a plan change.
We go to Arzor for a few shows, get the lay of the land there.
We'll go on to Trastor and set down there for a couple of months.
We'll skip Lereyne until afterward." Cregar nodded slowly. "And I
go solo to Lereyne and Arzor and use local talent to help with
the snatches." "Smart man, you got it. And
just so's the trail breaks, you leave when we lay over at Port
Bhaiat on Yohal for a couple of days." He turned to leave. "An'
this time do a proper job. No deaders behind you; in, out, and
off-planet while the local yokels are still sucking their
thumbs." Laris drew back as far as
she could, putting her eye to a crack in the den wall. Dedran
walked away; Cregar was looking after him with a thoughtful look
on his face. Laris had seen that kind of look in the camps. It
was the slow, careful consideration of one predator wondering if
he could, or if the time was ripe yet to take a competing
predator down. She shivered. In her mind eyes opened and watched
Cregar with her. A thought formed. *He waits. He may challenge
when he returns if he has succeeded. That way he will bring good
news to sweeten Dedran's death.* Laris was stunned. The touch
of the mind was familiar but not the blurred mix of picture and
emotion she usually experienced *Prauo?* A feeling of laughter. *Who
else, sister-without-fur?* The presence was gone again and she
blinked. After that she hurried
through her chores and returned to her cabin. Prauo lay along one
of the two bunks, great purple eyes surveying her with calm
amusement. For a moment as Laris stood in the doorway it was as
if the sight of him was new again. She admired the sharply
delineated black-on-gold markings. Prauo's body was gold, lean,
with long, thick fur. His face, tail, and legs were sheathed in
shorter black fur and light purple eyes looked from the black
mask of his face fur. When Laris had found him
he'd been the size of a half-grown Terran kitten. She'd assumed
that's what he was, some mutant coloration of one anyhow. Four
months he'd remained unchanged, then he'd taken to her bunk and
appeared ill for several days. But during those same days he'd
eaten and grown hugely. By the time that spurt of growth had
halted he was some thirty pounds, long and lean with developing
muscles and claws of which no tigerbat would be
ashamed. The second development had
been unobtrusive: the ability to look through her eyes and allow
her to see through his. That, she had been able to hide from
Dedran and Cregar. The next growth spurt had again put weight on
him. He'd attained a little over fifty pounds. And to her
amusement he could slide through almost any small gap by flexing
his shoulders together. Dedran had found a use for that, and for
the odd sucker-pads which had opened from small round growths on
each of Prauo's mid-leg joints. The cat could climb even an
overhanging plascrete or clearplas wall, and could slide through
small gaps. He was intelligent enough to bring back anything of
which he'd been shown a picture, just so long as he was bringing
it back to Laris. She'd obeyed Dedran's orders on that. It was
safer and it allowed them to build up their small savings. A
Dedran pleased was a man who tossed her the odd half credit, a
handful of quarter or tenth credits. It was these she saved in an
obvious hiding place. But the first time Prauo had
been out with her he'd also brought back a cheek-pouch filled
with full credits found while he hunted the item he'd been shown.
He didn't find the coins every time, but often enough to build
her savings to a respectable sum. And now, with Prauo's loot from
that first haul, was hidden a rag-wrapped bundle of small pieces
of jewelry. Nothing too large, too valuable. All unidentifiably
mass-produced but easily sellable by a girl who appeared
respectable and without bringing suspicion down on
her. That was something else
Dedran had not discovered, that Prauo had cheek-pouches which he
could keep tightly shut. He could eat and drink without revealing
the items carefully stowed. The first time it happened Laris had
been both surprised and amused. The big cat had shown nothing,
returned with her, accepted food and drink while Dedran examined
the stolen item with smug approval and then dismissed her. Once
back in their cabin Prauo had made odd retching motions and
deposited seven credits on her bed. After that he rarely
returned from one of their forays without offering her some small
gift. She'd examined the pouches. They weren't large but they
would hold a small Astran apple at need. Laris often wondered
what purpose they served. She'd never seen Prauo use them except
when they were out with Dedran. But they hardly could have
appeared for that purpose. She looked at the big cat now and
moved to sit by him, her hand scratching around his ears as he
purred. "So you've found something
else you can do." It hit her then like a blow. He'd spoken in her
mind. He'd been Prauo, her friend whom she loved. But he wasn't
just a cat, he was an intelligent being. Her hand halted, fingers
buried in the thick fur as she stared down at him. He looked up,
purple eyes meeting her dark brown ones. He yawned widely, teeth
closing with the snick of a steel trap. "Prauo?" Her voice shook.
Was he still her friend or would he change now, see her as
unimportant? His head thrust hard against
her. *Never, sister-without-fur. We are kin. My life is yours.
And besides,* the mind voice was warm with amusement. *How well
do you think we should do if you appeared with me at some human
office to say that this animal who lives in the circus is an
intelligent being? That it should have citizen's rights? Better
that Dedran and Cregar do not know. In time one shall come who
will understand and listen. Until then let us wait and be
silent.* Laris covered one of his
paws with her hands. "That's smart. But listen, brother-with-fur.
Do you remember anything now? Where you came from, how come I
found you?" *Nothing. Only terror, then
cold and hunger. So cold, so alone until you came.* His head
thrust into her hands. She hugged him savagely.
"Not alone, not ever again. We stay together so long as you want.
We don't tell anyone what you can do. Maybe as you say, we find
someone who'll listen and believe. After that who knows what will
happen. But until then we keep silent." *That is wisdom, and on
keeping silent, my sister, there is no need for you to speak
aloud. One might overhear. Speak with your mind to mine. I shall
listen.* Laris concentrated on
forming words silently. *Like this?* *Exactly like
that.* She muffled giggles in her
hands. *It feels strange.* *You will come to find it
natural and it is safer—for both of us.* With that she
could only agree. *Doesn't it feel odd, one
day you can't understand what I say, the next you don't just
know, you can speak to me?* *I have always understood
much. But now it is as if whatever muffled my mind is gone. Think
of it as if you learned a new language. At first you must think
of every word, understand only a little of what you hear. Then
after a time you begin to think in that tongue. Words flow
freely, understanding comes. It is so with me. I have been able
to do this for many weeks but I wished to wait until I understood
more.* Laris nodded. *I understand.
And since you have learned now, there are things I would discuss
with you.* Purple eyes gleamed at her.
*Cregar and his killing of beasts. Dedran and his links with the
Thieves Guild. I have seen and heard much these past few weeks.
Who hesitates to speak before an animal? More, Dedran hopes to
use us for his own ends at Yohal. He came upon me in the corridor
yesterday and talked to me of his plans.* The cat purred as Laris
grinned. *If he knew what we know he
would not have spoken so freely. But he did. He intends to steal
plans. One on Yohal has discovered a way to secure knowledge more
safely; it is an advance which will bring wealth and
complications for the Thieves Guild. Therefore we are to steal
the plans so the guild may be forewarned and find a means to
break the codes on this new knowledge, so that they can sell or
use it themselves.* Laris considered. If they
failed in the task Dedran would be furious. If he guessed that
the failure was deliberate he'd regard them as tools which had
turned in his hand. Both of them would disappear and no one would
ask questions. Best, then, that they succeeded. But best too,
that they be ready. Once the beast masters on Lereyne and Arzor
had been plundered the hunt would be up behind them. Maybe she could aid that
hunt. It might also be possible to turn Dedran against Cregar. If
they killed each other she could escape in the confusion. After
that who would notice or care that some bond-servant had
vanished? Her bond would not last much longer. By the time they
cleared the sector it would have less than half a year to run.
She shared that thought with Prauo. *Your hoard grows. What if
you bought yourself free? That too is something on which to
think.* Laris blinked. It was
indeed. Dedran would never agree, but if he was no longer alive,
then her bond reverted to the government of whichever planet they
were on when her bond-master died. With only five months to go
few would wish to purchase it. And then too, she had a choice.
Under the law on many worlds she might choose which of a number
of bond-buyers she would accept once the original owner was gone.
If she had the credit to buy herself free there were none who
could prevent it. Prauo's thought held
savagery. *That is very well, sister-without-fur. I would have
taken out the throat of that one before. Save that I would have
been slain and you left little better off.* Laris was practical. *He
doesn't beat me, only hits me now and again. The food is ample
and he obeys the law and clothes me well enough. Many bonded have
far worse conditions. At least he does not use me as a
woman.* The cat snarled softly.
*That is so,* he sent. *But I tasted his mind while I lay
watching you as you talked together. I did not like the taste of
his thoughts. You are valuable as a beast trainer; what if he
persuaded you into an open bond which could be kept or passed to
another?* *I would not
sign.* *There are those who would
happily fake such a bond, and who would listen to
you?* *And then?* *Your bond to the circus is
over in less than one year. An open bond would keep you here
until death claimed you, or if another paid high enough you could
be sold on.* She saw the idea at once.
*There are those who use beasts to fight for amusement.* Her
thoughts darted. Dedran had contacts, friends, power. He could
take her to a place where officials would swear she had signed a
bond herself. The circus boss knew she would never willingly
train beasts for an arena, but once Dedran had an open bond he
could sell her, the arena master would break her to
obedience. Thus far she'd been of more
value as she was. She recalled his words to Cregar. The circus
boss might be getting out, leaving to take up some place of power
in the guild. What matter then if she was of no more use to the
circus? He could sell her as a trainer, or kill her to see her
mouth stayed shut. He'd kill Prauo before that. Dedran was no
fool, he'd know he could never abuse her in any major way while
the big cat lived. Or worse, he could drug
Prauo and sell him to some planetside zoo. Put him in stasis and
take regular samples, try to clone more of him for thief
training. In her mind she felt the cat following her
thoughts. *Best we are gone before he
decides that his time has come,* the cat sent slowly. *Or if he is dead before
that time. Then his plans die with him.* *You think of
Cregar?* *He hates.* *Then let us help that hate.
But for now, best we sleep. Tomorrow there is always work to do.*
Laris smiled. That was all too true. They slept and with morning
both moved toward their new plan. Subtly they strove to widen the
breach between the men. Laris dropped half sentences, apparently
repeating things Dedran had said to her. Prauo allowed Cregar to
follow him twice, each time he warned his sister-without-fur. The
second time it prompted an open quarrel. Cregar was due to leave the
ship when it landed in the morning. The beast master who had
retired on Lereyne had teamed with a pair of wolves. One had
died. Fortunately a genetech had arrived about that time, or so
Dedran's contact reported. The man had successfully cloned a
replacement beast from the body. He had gone on to build other
wolves from tissue samples taken from both. Now Lereyne had a
small pack of the animals in a large preserved wilderness
area. As the only wild Terran
creatures the human-settled planet had, they were much prized.
But there was a catch—the wolves in a beast master team
were genetically augmented to be more intelligent. The
authorities had not wanted a pack of those wolves freed, so the
genetech had reverted his end-products back to ordinary wolves.
Hence Cregar could not simply steal one of the pack, a far easier
task. Instead he must steal away the only wolf left with team
gene-augmentation. Since the beast master lived
on the outskirts of a large city, that meant many watching eyes.
Cregar would have problems. Laris snickered quietly with Prauo
after they overheard a discussion on the difficulties. *I hope he gets caught. He
won't keep silent and take all the punishment. He'd spill on
Dedran.* *And the patrol descends on
the ship, and us as well. Better Cregar returns and we can set
him against Dedran. Now, when they are both about the ship, is a
fine time. Cregar is one who holds a grudge well.* After that the maneuvers
were complicated but ultimately successful. Laris mentioned to
Dedran that she was worried about one of the carra. It had
appeared sluggish when they practiced in the empty training hold.
Perhaps she should ask Cregar to look at it. He trained so well.
For that last comment she adopted a rather dumb and admiring
voice and expression. Dedran, busier than usual with the landing,
and annoyed by the look, snorted and spoke without
thinking. Prauo had trotted past
Cregar, carrying something in his mouth. He was ordered to stop,
to hand over his trophy. He'd given the human a smug defiant look
and ignored the order. Cregar had pursued grimly. He arrived at
the last curve of the corridor in time to hear Laris's suggestion
and Dedran's savage reply. "Cregar! High Command tossed
him out. If he was that good he wouldn't have ended up taking my
orders in a..." Cregar exploded around the
bend. "In a run-down circus in a broken-down ship, bossed by a
man with a fat price on his head," he finished. Dedran's eyes glittered. "I
wouldn't talk about prices if I were you." "Wouldn't you? Then perhaps
I should talk about a man who pretends to be an owner when he's
more of a hired hand." Dedran opened his mouth to
speak as his hand dropped to the stun gun at his belt. Then he
saw Laris listening open-mouthed. Cregar's gaze
followed. "Get the kid out of
here." Dedran waved her to leave
and she obeyed meekly—as far as the bend. Then she
leaned on the bulkhead, sliding the nearest door open about a
foot. But to her exasperation the voices around the bend had
dropped to a vicious muttering. Still, from the tone it was no
friendly conversation. She shut the door again and padded
silently away along the corridor. The low snarl of the sounds
followed her. She busied herself in
cleaning the tigerbat cage and jumped when Cregar spoke
quietly. "You watch yourself, lass. I
may be a lot of what he claims but I'm not a man to work the
arenas." He gave her a half-grin as he walked away, leaving Laris
gaping after him. Perhaps it had been because he'd heard her
admiring him, she thought. Or perhaps he was merely enjoying
spoiling Dedran's plans. For whatever reason he'd said it, he'd
confirmed her own fears and Prauo's belief. She would indeed
watch out. They landed on Yohal and
Cregar slid into the port-side crowd. He gave her a tiny nod as
he went and she nodded back. It wouldn't hurt to keep him sweet.
Prauo wouldn't be working with her in any act. Not when Dedran
planned a theft. He wouldn't want anyone to notice the cat. But
she rode in the opening procession, swung out on the trapeze with
the carra, and acted out the tigerbat play. The audience departed,
leaving Laris to clean the cages and settle the animals in for
the night. After that, in the ship lights she was surprised to
notice men approaching the ramp. One look and Laris recognized
their strut. These men had some sort of authority. They were used
to obedience. She fled for Dedran, dropping into the slurred ship
slang so any stranger who overheard would be less likely to
understand. "There's men coming, look
like law 'a some kind." "Crats, why now?" He moved
quietly to the ramp door and looked around the edge of the
opening. "Authority, maybe." He shrugged and strode down the
ramp. "Can I help you, Honored Sirs?" "Do you have a man named Jas
Cregar aboard?" "No, may I know why you
ask?" "That is not your business.
We will look on your ship." "Now, hold on
there..." His protest was cut short as
one man produced a paper and displayed it. "We have the right.
Step aside." To Laris's bewilderment look
was all they did. They asked no questions even when she made sure
they would see her working. But she did notice something
interesting. One had an earpiece. He glanced at a wrist dial now
and again and she wondered if his asking for Cregar hadn't been a
ruse, if they weren't looking for something else. If so, they
didn't find it. They departed and Dedran stood on the ramp top
wearing a thoughtful expression. She guessed he was wondering
too. And what about tonight? Chapter Three Once the invaders were well
and truly gone Dedran turned to Laris. "What did you see?" She
recounted the earpiece and the impression that one had been
spending too much time looking at a wristwatch. "I thought I heard something
too. So high it was more like an air vibration." She hadn't but
Prauo had. He'd alerted her in the first place. "A watch." Dedran
understood. "I see." His voice came slowly, thoughtfully. "No,
they don't make a sound like that and one doesn't keep looking
over and over to see the time usually. Either they had a
deadline—or that was not a watch." He stood
a moment and spoke to himself, not the listening girl. "And why
Cregar? They knew his name, what did they want with him? Maybe
tonight would be dangerous." He turned briskly. "Laris, wait here, see to
everything. I must make a comcall." She looked after him as he
hurried down the ramp. This was becoming dangerous for her and
Prauo, as well as Dedran. If she jumped ship here the authorities
would probably pick her up at once. Something made her feel that
while the officials might have left, eyes were still on her and
the ship. Dedran didn't return until the setting up was complete.
Then he had only time to fling a hurried word at her as he
passed. "Be ready after
midnight." She nodded
meekly. The performance was well
received, the audience in this backwater enjoyed the novelty and
afterward the crowds on the midway were in a spending mood.
Optional extras or not, the circus would make money here if they
didn't overstay their welcome. To make sure however, the
sideshows had been set up and already the holograms danced and
coaxed passersby to enter the curiosity tents. In the game tents
barkers called the wandering crowds to roll up and try their
luck. It was a charming scene—if one didn't know, as Laris did,
that all the games were carefully rigged, and most of the
curiosity tent attractions were cunningly faked. Prauo's mind voice came to
her as she moved in the shadows. *You were right. Others watch.
There is a ring about us.* *Where is the
nearest?* *Walk toward the tigerbat
cages slowly. Be casual. I will direct you. I cannot probe their
minds but I can feel their attention like a light directed upon
us.* She obeyed, wandering as if
checking on the circus animals. Yes, a watcher there, and another
further along. A third near the ramp noting all who came and went
from the ship. She stretched, allowed her shoulders to slump
wearily. Then she plodded up the ramp. Once out of sight she
trotted in search of Dedran. "There're spies outside.
They're watching everyone." His face twisted in fear and
fury as she spoke. Then he fought for calm. "Well done. But I
must get out of here again for an hour or so. Let no one
know I've left." He considered. "Go to the tent of Good Fortunes.
Set it up so that it blocks the alley between beast cages. The
carra have the end cage, do they not?" "Yes." She saw his plan and
grinned, a quick flicker of amusement. "Well? Hurry, girl.
Hurry!" Laris did so, appearing back
down the ramp minutes later with two of the men carrying a light
tent and a large case. She'd done this before, usually to take
messages for Dedran—the sort of message he didn't
want others to know he was sending or receiving. Not that she was
able to read them, of course. Dedran wasn't that silly. He
trusted her more than most, which was to say, only a
little. She oversaw the setting up
of the tent and dismissed the men. Then she vanished inside.
Moving swiftly she unfolded the table, placed the crystal ball on
the tabletop and laid out the cards. From a pocket in the case
she retrieved a long brilliant robe, wig, face veil, and several
other items. She donned the wig and clothing then moved to the
door to place a sign at the entrance. It took little time before
seekers after knowledge began to drift her way. For several hours she told
fortunes, amused the customers with her wit and insight. Three
years back a real teller of fortunes had traveled with the
circus. Shiira had an empathy rating and had been very good. In
Laris she'd detected another who could read the emotions and
hopes flung at a teller of fortunes. She'd liked the child and
quietly, patiently, she'd taught Laris all the girl could learn.
Shiira had left after a few months. Her abilities had warned her
it was best to be gone, and she had listened. Fortunately she had
said nothing of Laris's small talent to Dedran. Almost a year later when
Dedran had needed a back door Laris had suggested she become a
fortune-teller. It had worked that time, and other times
subsequently. Moreover it was a useful supplement to the circus
income at leaner times. After all, Laris was a bond-servant and
the money she made went into circus coffers. However, to Dedran
she was merely a good talker giving the fools what they wished to
hear. She talked on until midnight had come and gone. Then a man
paced into the tent. She knew the feeling of
Dedran but he would not be pleased to know it. He'd donned the
mask and the light, toe-to-throat coverall worn by members of the
Casran sect, an offshoot of the main religion on Yohal. The
watchers would still suspect. The disguise was too basic. Too
obvious. She went into her routine and was hushed. "Enough. It's Dedran. Now,
do you have the things?" She produced the items she'd
laid aside ready. He stripped coverall and mask then settled the
wig and overcoat into place. Quick strokes with plastiflesh
stick, a lightening of his eyebrows, contacts slipped in, and he
was a different man. It had taken only minutes and thus far she'd
taken care to give each fortune seeker a good long fortune. The
watchers, if any had concentrated on her, were already used to
seeing those who entered stay for a length of time. Dedran raised the rear of
the tent, moved out unobtrusively, and hurried down the narrow
alley between cages. Laris watched. He slipped through a panel at
the back of the carra cage and would emerge unobtrusively on the
other side. The watchers would start to wonder when he did not
reappear but she'd dealt with that too. A short time later one of
the women scratched at the tent back. Laris lifted the material.
The woman walked in, donned mask and coverall, and left openly
through the front of the tent. Let the watchers see that,
and not know the person they had seen enter Laris's tent was not
the same person as had just departed. The sect's costume had been
of use to Dedran before now—and had likely been useful as a
disguise to many involved in both intrigues and other acts, Laris
thought. The Casrans were an equal opportunity sect. To that end,
while light, the coveralls were designed to hide any gender
differences. One never knew if one spoke to male or female until
the one addressed replied. Even then, most who'd belonged for any
length of time had been trained to speak in a flat neutral voice
which made it hard to tell male from female. Laris shared her
thoughts with Prauo. *A11 that is true,
furless-sister. But what interests me more is Dedran's errand.
And why those men sought Cregar.* Laris told another fortune
while mulling over those questions. She was interrupted by
giggles outside. Someone speaking in accented one-speech was
insisting that she be taken inside to learn her fate. The hair on
the back of Laris's neck rose. She could feel danger here. The
voice sounded like that of a young flighty girl, indulged,
spoiled, and from some rich planetside family. But there were
undertones only Laris, and through her, Prauo, could
detect. *Leave, sister, quickly. Go
openly before they enter.* Laris leapt for the tent
entrance. All her instincts were shouting that she should not
allow herself to be trapped inside where none could see. She was
barely in time. Her slender body brushed past the girl who would
have entered and the girl staggered sideways with a gasp. Laris
caught only an impression of her. Apparently young, richly
dressed—and with the most coldly vicious,
experienced eyes Laris had ever seen. The man with her matched
well. If he wasn't heavily armed, then Laris was a carra. He
appeared young and from some wealthy provincial family but his
eyes too did not match the outward picture. *Strip your veil,* Prauo
sent. *Make them believe they are dealing with a
child.* Laris paused to wipe her
forehead as she stood outside the tent. She removed the veil,
lightened her voice, and shifted her stance to the slightly
angular hip-shot way of standing of a younger girl. "I apologize, Gracious Lady,
Honored Sir. But I am weary, the tent grows stuffy, and I feel
unwell." The girl surveyed her. The
air was one of spoiled irritation but the eyes showed only
calculation. "I wanted my fortune told. I demand it. That's why
you're there, isn't it? Tell her, Baris. I'm the Lady Ideena, and
it'll pay for her to do what I want." Laris concentrated, letting
her body sag a little, her voice waver. "I'm sorry, Lady. But I
really do feel unwell." From the corner of one eye she could see
Dedran approaching, or at least someone who looked the way he had
when he had departed her tent. She raised her voice, thinning it
to a more childish note. "I feel siiick. Oooo!" She
retched realistically. Dedran had slipped behind a
cage. He wouldn't want this pair—whoever they were—to get their hands on her too
long in case she talked. His current disguise would take only
minutes to remove. She must play for time. The man took hold of
her shoulder. "If you feel sick then you
should go back inside your tent, my dear. You can lie down in
there. We'll stay with you. Maybe you'll feel better after a
while." Somehow Laris doubted that. She doubled over, holding the
tent rope in a ferocious grip against his urging hands. Her voice
came out in a piercing wail. "I feel so sick." She
swallowed again and again, forcing her stomach to react. She'd
eaten only a couple of hours earlier. One of the circus women had
brought her the food and the portion had been generous. It was
always easier to be sick on a full stomach. She swallowed again.
Where was Dedran? They were beginning to attract attention but
the grip on her shoulder hurt. The girl, hands screened by their
bodies, was trying to make her let go of the tent
rope. Laris felt her fingers pried
loose one by one. They'd have her in a minute. She wailed again.
Her stomach finally cooperated and she was lavishly sick over the
girl's expensive cloak. The girl snarled. "Get her into the tent,
Baris. There's gossip about this outfit and I want to find out
all I can. There could be credits in it for us." A voice came just as Laris
was running out of strength. "Gracious Lady, Honored Sir. May I
aid?" Dedran moved to block the tent entrance. Laris took her cue. "Oh,
Master. I'm so sorry. Maybe it was something I ate, an' the tent
being so hot. I came out to get air an' these gentlefolk wanted
their fortunes told. I was afraid if I went back inside I'd be
sick but they kept pulling at me, an' then I really was sick and
now they're mad at me..." She let her voice—which had gradually become
louder, attracting the attention of many close by—trail off into childish
sobs. Dedran drew himself up. "I
apologize for my bond-servant. But she is very young." "Too young to be in bond,
surely?" The man's tone was acid. Dedran raised his eyebrows,
lying smoothly. "On Meril one may set a bond providing the
servant is ten. And the girl has only been with me two years."
His voice became silky. "If it is any of your business. It is not
I who has been frightening the child." Laris swallowed a grin.
She'd been bound on Kowar where the bond age was sixteen.
Although it was true Meril permitted a far lower age. And she'd
been with the circus more than two years. But then she'd also
been bound earlier than the law allowed. Oh, what a tangled web
was being woven. But that precious pair had just noticed that
people were gathering, drawn by the commotion and raised voices.
They wouldn't like that much public attention, she was sure. They
didn't. Her would-be abductors were muttering explanations and
allowing the crowd to close about them until they were
gone. "Who were they?" Dedran
hissed. "They called themselves
Baris and Lady Ideena," Laris hissed back. He nodded, apparently
recognizing the names. "Scavengers seeking pickings and
information. Scavengers—with a touch of the tigerbat," he
added as he helped her with mock solicitous-ness to walk toward
the ship. "What did they ask you?" "Nothing. They just tried to
get me back into the tent. She said there was gossip and where
there was talk there were credits." Dedran grunted. "She'd be
the one to hear any talk too. Crats! Have we drawn the attention
of every nose on a dozen planets?" He focused on Laris. "You'd
better not be really ill. We've a job to do tonight still." She
gasped. That was madness with so many watchers. He
shrugged. "I know. But there's no
choice. We do it tonight. I've been given a security-breaker and
copier. It will take time but should break the security coding
and copy the information. Then you can put the target back in
place and no one will know. We leave in a couple more days and
they won't know what happened." He snickered. "Not until they
find copies of their fancy protections being sold all
over." Laris hesitated to argue but
she had to say something. It would be Laris he turned on and her
at risk. "Surely they'd have the information protected by their
own new codes." He chuckled harshly. "It
should be. But money buys favors. It bought that one. There's an
assistant who thinks he should be more." "Then why doesn't he just
sell the information?" She'd noticed that he seemed to be talking
freely and she chilled. That wasn't a good sign. "None of your business, my
dear. You and your clever cat just get the thing to me outside. I
copy it, and you return it." His fingers dug into her arm as he
shook her slightly. "Understand?" "Yes," Laris
muttered. "Good. I'll have the tent
packed up. You go and sleep, eat something but not too much. We
don't want you being sick in the wrong place." He laughed and
pushed her toward her cabin. "Go on. And be ready in a couple of
hours. I won't want to waste time." She nodded, trudging for her
cabin. She liked none of this and danger signals were nudging her
harder and harder. She slid her door aside and joined the big cat
where he sprawled comfortably on the bunk. No one could hear
anything but within the cabin the two were at once engaged in
intense discussion. They came to no conclusions,
only questions. Who were the searching men, why did they ask for
Cregar, and for what were they searching? Then there were Baris
and the Lady Ideena. Dedran said they were scavengers. Presumably
they'd have asked questions of Laris. But what would they have
wanted to know? Were they members of the Thieves Guild and if so,
did they have any standing? If they did, how high was it in
comparison to Dedran's status? They considered that for
some time. There'd always been thieves, even on Terra. When
Terrans broke into space, thieves had gone with them. Gradually
they'd organized into a guild which now stretched across the
settled planets. They had their own organizational
structure—that much was known by ordinary
people who kept their ears open for the gossip, although little
else about the shadowy group was public knowledge. It was known
that the guild had a system which allowed the more important
members to be recognized by their own people on any human-settled
planet. That, Laris believed, applied to Dedran, which suggested
in turn that either he himself was important, or that he was
commanded by one who was of power in the guild. Finally, tired out, girl and
cat slept. The alarm woke both at three A.M. planet time. Yohal's
rotation being slower, there were still some six hours until
daylight. Laris yawned, stretched, and sullenly climbed into a
dark blue jumpsuit. Prauo trotted silently beside her as she left
her cabin. Dedran was waiting, dressed in a dull dark-green
coverall. One side of it bulged slightly and from the way one
hand shifted Laris was sure he was carrying a stunner as
well. He made for his cabin again,
locked the door, switched on a light, and dropped down a desktop.
On that he laid out plans and several gadgets. Laris had grown
used to using the items and to learning plans within minutes.
Once he'd finished the explanation she asked only one
question. "Security in the
area?" "All taken care of. Now,
come with me and don't speak again until I say you can. No matter
how long that may be." He beckoned and set off toward the
ramp. She and the cat fell in
behind obediently. They traveled in silence until they reached a
hovercab stand. The cabs were robotic and accepted tokens. Dedran
signaled her to remain silent as he fed tokens into the fare
slot. The cab lifted, and they were on their way. Some twenty
minutes later they arrived, exited, walked around a corner,
climbed into a second cab, and rode again before finding another.
They left the third cab and went on foot a while before Dedran
halted at a corner. From one pocket he took a
small rod and extended it to a right angle. Placing his eye
against one end he peered in. "Right, be ready." He waited,
"Wait... wait ... now, around the corner." Laris obeyed. He
pointed to a wall cloaked in heavy shrubbery around the base.
"Into there, now." She scurried into hiding, Prauo close on her
heels. Dedran paused, looking out over the street. All was quiet
and empty. On a post above them a scanner revolved
slowly. Laris had noted that in one
swift glance as she dived for cover. It was slower than those
normally used to cover the wealthier residential streets. It also
seemed to halt in its circuit earlier and return. It looked as if
the last part of the missing arc would have covered the house
wall. Now it didn't. She guessed someone had been here before
them. Some kid working his passage for the guild by slowing and
aborting a portion of the scanner's movement. But there was no time to
think about that. She had to keep her mind on the job. Prauo was
scaling the wall, a fine rope trailing behind him. He reached the
top, folded his shoulders together, slid between bars barely a
hand's length apart, then walked briskly around one to anchor the
rope. His mind voice reached her. *Climb, sister-one. None
stir here.* She climbed, leaving Dedran
below. Once balanced on the window ledge she was able to cut the
center bar and bend it outward. She slid adroitly through the
narrow gap and joined the waiting cat. Her hand smoothed the
ruffled fur over his shoulders. *Just as well for us that
Yohal has little of the inner world's technology. Their security
is laughable.* *Not so laughable that they
cannot invent the thing we seek.* *Having technology and
having brains are different things.* She felt his amused
agreement as they moved silently through the building. Dedran had
shown her a plan of the place. It was simplified but it had all
she needed to find the safe. A small instrument given to her
before she climbed would deactivate the alarm. She had the
security codes after that. The guild would hold their stolen
knowledge until the new invention was in widespread use. Then,
little by little they would sell the code-breaker. They would make millions of
credits from the sale, garner a hundred favors owed. This theft
of the breaker's plans and technology, if successful, would
probably gain Dedran more guild status. If he failed it might
gain all three of them an early, unlabeled, and unlamented grave.
Laris moved more carefully. She'd gain nothing from a successful
theft but she had no desire for the possible results of a theft
foiled by discovery. Ahead the big cat moved on
silken silent paws. They accessed the safe without difficulty
once it was found. Laris shivered with nerves the almost sixty
minutes it took to crack the technology and make the copy. With
all the information safely in her hands she returned it, closed
and re-coded the safe. Then, she carefully reset the
alarm. Half done. She moved quickly
back through the building. Hissed the all-clear to Dedran and
climbed through the window bars. With the miniature heat device
she re-welded the bar shut; below, Dedran was waiting when she
descended the rope. Together they watched as the scanner circled
slowly, halted, returned, and set off again. "Now." They trotted quickly
around the corner into the darker alley. Laris heaved a sigh as
they reached it in safety. No alarm. With luck they'd be home
free. It seemed they were, since in another hour they were
drifting, darker shadows among shadows in a deserted circus
ground, up the ramp to their respective cabins, and still in
silence. After that Laris waited. The
performances went by, there was no sign of Baris and Ideena and
after another week of ordinary events the circus's ship requested
takeoff clearance. It was granted casually. They lifted from
Yohal and no one below was the wiser that the departing ship was
now worth a million times its previous value. Chapter Four The circus landed on Arzor
with the minimum of official fuss and the maximum glare of
publicity. Not since the half-forgotten days before the war had
there been such an event. Some of the oldest families at Arzor
Port liked to consider themselves sophisticated. But
sophistication is in the eye of the beholder. It pleased the
first-ship families to decide that a traveling circus was
sophisticated and to have their entire families attend in their
best clothing. With them, as Dedran had
expected, came the beast master here. Laris was watching when
they arrived. "Is that them?" Occasionally Dedran enjoyed
showing off what he knew. "Yes, see. The man at the end with the
woman. That's the beast master and his wife. His name is Hosteen
Storm and she is Tani." "Who're the others with
them?" Laris was peering at the distant figures with
fascination. "His stepfather and younger
half-brother. Storm only joined the family after the war. He was
raised apart. But the stepfather is from a first-ship family. He
doesn't make a parade of it but there's some wealth and a lot of
influence there." He studied her briefly. "I'd have no objections
if you spoke to them. With you handling the animals here they may
well wish to talk with you." His fingers bit into her arm. "Just
be very careful what you say, my dear. We wouldn't want them to
be warned in any way, would we?" "No, of course not. I'll be
careful." But he'd put the idea into
her mind and she thought about it all through the performance.
She gave it up reluctantly. If Dedran thought she'd let anything
slip it would be her body on the turntable; what would Prauo do
then? Even as her mind flew in search of ideas she soared on her
trapeze. The carras soared with her, tumbling like the happy
beasts they were, whirling about her, clowning to her serious act
so that Arzor Port alternately gasped at her skill and laughed as
the carras foiled her attempts to be a serious artist time and
time again. She caught glimpses of the
family as she swung. They were laughing as hard as anyone, all
but the beast master and even he wore a half-smile. Somehow it
pleased her, that they should admire her. She pushed her act to
the edge and brought gasps from below. She ended the performance
by dropping lightly from the trapeze to land bouncing in the
safety net, the carras dropping with her, chittering
merrily. The family was clapping for
her as she swung down, to turn, bowing to the audience. She
scampered with the beasts from the ring and Dedran watched her
take up the carras. That had been an interesting display. The
girl had pushed safety to the limits and given an act that had
brought the audience halfway to its feet in horror and then
applause. But how much of her daring had been a determination to
show her skill before a beast master, Dedran wondered. His mind paused at that
thought before following the path. How much had been admiration
for beast master skills? Maybe a desire to see the man's animals
remain where they were? Dedran was not a fool. He knew the girl
was more and more unhappy over the stolen animals that died. So
was Cregar. Could it have been one of them who had brought down
those spies from the authority, and later, Baris and Ideena, upon
the show? He'd have to think about that. Cregar and Laris could
be replaced. Not easily on the part of the man but for the girl,
there was the De Pyall camp where he'd first found
her. His lips twisted into a
sneer. In a refugee camp there were always those who'd take any
job, accept any condition to be free of the place. He'd known the
girl's fears. But she'd still followed him. Signed a false closed
bond and held to it. His glare became a scowl. He hoped to leave
the circus behind if his patron's plans worked out well. He would
take the girl—someone with her skills was worth
real credits to arena buyers if he faked her signature on an open
bond. He had to be careful there. Between officials, the patrol,
and do-gooders who checked on bondservants, he dare not make the
wrong move. Not yet. But the closed bond under which he held her
did not allow the bond's sale to someone else. An open bond would
permit that. He wanted the money he could
get for her. But the guild had no time for what its members
wanted. He had a job to do and until it was completed he dare not
take time for his own wishes. Not that it mattered anyway. There
were months yet before her bond was completed and where would she
go then? No, she'd sign for another year. Surely by that time
he'd have taken a few live beasts. He must. A small shiver ran down his
spine. The guild was becoming impatient. The latest message from
his patron had indicated that Dedran's position could be in
danger if he didn't produce something soon. And the guild had a
simple way of seeing that an out-of-favor member told no tales.
The lean man shivered again as he ran into the ring, spinning to
bow and garner the audience's attention in his upraised hands.
Cregar had better not fail or it could be the death of all of
them. He switched off his
thoughts, concentrated on the clapping fools around him, and
signaled the next act. He had a show to give and that too was
part of it. Lull the idiots, then strike. He'd use the girl to
open a gap in beast master armor. She was quick. She'd make
friends. Then return to give him what Cregar needed to take the
animals once the circus was safely away. He settled to the whirl
of acts about him. Laris came on again in her
boyish guise as the tigerbat cage was pushed in and connected to
the larger cage where she'd display their play. Her old friend
was first out and she saw the crowd stiffen. She faced it, then
turned her back as it ran on its wing-knuckles to lie on the
ground, pulling the light branch across its lower
body. She turned back, miming her
shock, her fear at the sight of the deadly beast—and tigerbats were deadly, in that
there was no fakery. To the Terran eye they looked like an
amalgam of tiger and large bat, hence the name. They stood some
five feet tall, and one on the attack appeared to be all reaching
teeth and long sickle-like claws. They'd been a horror to the
settlers on their original world, although by now they had been
almost wiped out there. Still, enough people on other worlds had
seen depictions of them and their depredations to know how truly
dangerous they were. Laris mimed her fear,
showing to the crowd then her growing realization that the savage
beast was trapped and no threat to her. She was triumphant,
raising her weapon to kill, then slowly finding sympathy for the
injured beast, freeing it, and standing to watch it dart
away. In the front ringside seats,
a ranger leaned over to speak to Storm. "He's clever, but aren't
those things dangerous?" "Dangerous enough alone and
lethal in a major swarm. I doubt they'd have that here. A real
swarm has a hundred members or more." The man returned to his seat
and Storm concentrated. Beside him he could feel Tani doing the
same as her hand slid into his. Her whisper came to his ears
alone. "That's the girl from the
trapeze act, isn't it?" She caught his nod. Her senses extended
to touch the animal in the cage. "Friendship. It trusts her. She
is kind." "How many of
them?" "I feel five, no
more." Storm nodded slightly. That
was the number he could feel as well. Enough to tear the girl to
pieces in seconds if they attacked in swarm-rage. But he sensed
no anger. Only anticipation, enjoyment. They liked what they
would do. He watched the act. It was clever. The whole tiny play
was a timeworn idea, the person who saves an animal only to have
the beast save them in turn. But it was well done and tigerbats
could be genuinely lethal to the person who acted with them. She
was skillful. From his ringside position he could sense that she
was in no danger from these. She took her bow and the
tigerbats ran down the tunnel to the smaller cage. It was rolled
out and the carras returned with two Terran dogs to put on a
clown show which had everyone laughing as the main cage was
swiftly dismantled and removed. Storm and Tani came out
after the performance still smiling. His father looked at him in
resignation. "I suppose you want to see
the girl and her animals. Go on then. I'll get a ride with Put
Larkin. He'll drop me off. It's a fine night. I can walk down our
road." Tani fidgeted and Storm gave
one of his rare smiles. "It looks as if I should. Tani wants to
see the animals." He glanced at Logan, his younger half-brother.
"And I suppose you do too?" "Darn right." He showed off
a little. Storm and Tani weren't the only ones who could see
through a disguise. "Except that it's the girl I'd like to see.
Anyone who can sit around in a cage full of tigerbats and look
casual is someone worth meeting." Tani giggled. "She isn't bad
looking but don't you think she's too young for you?" Logan flushed. "I think she
may be older than she looks, and anyhow, I'd just like to see her
act again. She's good." His voice went up enthusiastically. "Did
you see her on that trapeze?" Tani nodded. "She was good.
You're right. And I loved those little animals with her in that
act. Storm?" She turned to her husband. "What were
they?" "Carras. They're a bit like
Terran monkeys, aren't they? They have similar habits too, but
nicer natures." His voice lowered. "What did you sense from
them?" "Pleasure," Tani said
softly. "They like the girl and they enjoy their act with her.
They were having fun in that clown act too. They aren't abused,
Storm. They're working for the fun of it and the food
treats." Her husband nodded. It was
something Kelson, head of the ranger group, had asked them to
find out. He looked down at Tani. They'd been married only a few
months and he was still a little incredulous at his good fortune.
After so long walking alone save for his beast master team he'd
never thought he'd find someone who would slip into place with
them all. But Tani had. She was not officially trained but her
gifts were, if anything, a little stronger than his
own. Her team, together with his
group, had been left at the main Quade ranch. Tani wanted to walk
the animal cages, study their inhabitants, and maybe arrange to
take samples from some of them to send on to the interstellar ark
her aunt and uncle ran. It preserved species against permanent
destruction and the Terran dogs should be immortalized in its
tissue-sample banks. They made their way slowly
through the crowd. It was a good-natured bunch here this evening,
Storm thought. But then with some of the port VIPs present, the
rangers and security were also out. Few of even the most
enthusiastic brawlers would be silly enough to start trouble
here. Tani danced ahead and his face softened again as he watched
her. It had been barely six months since the end of Arzor's
problem after Xiks had seeded the deadly flesh-eating swarms of
clickers in Arzor's lands of the Big Blue. He knew she still had
nightmares sometimes about the clickers and no wonder. He had a
few himself. But Tani had almost recovered from the trauma the
clickers had caused her. Last week she and Storm had been off
hunting with the Djimbut tribe of the Nitra, the Arzoran natives
with whom Tani had made such firm friends while she and Storm
sought out the origin of the clickers. The swarms had slain
natives and settlers alike and in the end, both peoples had
combined to destroy them. Tani and her beast team of coyotes and
Mandy the Ishan paraowl had accounted for a full bag of grass
hens on the hunt last week. Storm's team had remained at
home. Surra, his dune-cat, was in heat. She had not become
pregnant last time. But this time he was sure she would. After
that she'd bear the first dune-cat cubs to appear in the three
and a half years since Terra's destruction. Baku the African
eagle might take longer to produce her eggs. But she'd accepted
the mate Tani had given her from the ark's tissue samples. Hing,
the meercat, had had no scruples about a mate. She'd taken one
look at the male offered and accepted him with churring
approval. The meercat group of Hing,
her new mate, her four adult offspring, and their mates, were
producing a meercat population explosion just at present. Not
that this was a problem. The all but extinct Arzoran rinces had
occupied an important ecological niche on the planet, since it
was they who helped keep several desert species of large insect
and small lizard under population control. They also ate the eggs
of the big solitary venomous yoris lizard, when they could tease
a female from her nest in safety. The rinces had almost died
out after human settlement and a rince plague which followed two
generations later. Even scientific intervention had failed to
improve their survival rate. The meercats were moving into the
rince niche and doing it in style. Hosteen loved to see them.
After so long without a mate Hing was making up for lost time.
The original group with added mates had been ten. All had mated
and produced so that now the group numbered almost thirty.
Normally only the dominant female would have bred, but this time
at least, they had been encouraged to ignore custom. Hosteen and Tani had chosen
a second site for a meercat home. Once the babies were adult
they'd move half of the group there. Later the meercats would
move on to form their own new groups. In time they'd spread
across Arzor's desert lands. Both settlers and natives would
approve of that; the yoris were having a population explosion of
their own and needed the meercats to cut back on the big lizard's
numbers. Up ahead of him he felt a
surge of excitement from Tani. She turned to beckon him. He
reached her and looked in the cage. He blinked as he studied
Prauo. "What on Arzor is
that?" "I thought you'd
know." Logan joined them. "What's
that?" Hosteen snorted. "I've seen
many animals but not that one." He studied the longer gold fur,
the gleaming black of the shorter, plusher fur that clad the
creature's legs, face, and tail. "I really don't know. It's
beautiful but I'm certain I've never seen one like it before. I
wonder where it came from." Laris had been listening
quietly, unobtrusive around the cage corner. She allowed herself
to be seen as the question was asked. The younger man saw her and
nudged his brother. The three of them turned to look at her.
Prauo was in her mind. *Good scent,* he said
sleepily. *Don't distract me. They're
the kind who'd notice.* Aloud she spoke politely. "You like my
cat, noble visitors?" Logan spoke first. "He's
beautiful. None of us have ever seen one like him before. Were
did he come from?" "Fremlyn," Laris
began. The other man cut in. "I've
been to Fremlyn. They don't have an animal like this." Laris eyed him coolly. "I
never said they did. I said he came from Fremlyn. Where his home
world is, none of us know. I found him as a tiny starving cub
when the circus was there. He was on waste ground at the edge of
the port. He's been with me now for a long time. For all I know
he was some experimental beast and has no breed." The girl grinned. "My name's
Tani, this is Storm, my husband, and Logan, his brother. I'm
pleased to greet you." Laris nodded. "I'm Laris.
You seem to know animals?" Her tone was a question. Tani laughed softly. "Storm
is a beast master, if you've ever heard of them." "I've heard." Laris closed
her mind tight. Logan smiled. "You should
have been one as well," he said cheerfully. "That act with the
tigerbats was wonderful. But the stuff on the trapeze had my
heart in my mouth." He laughed suddenly. "When that carra caught
onto your foot just as you swung, I've never seen anything so
funny." Laris found she was smiling
too, seduced into verbal carelessness by the honest praise. "It's
part of the act but they enjoy it so much. Sometimes we just add
in bits. Everyone does. Particularly if we need to stretch the
acts because one's missing." Tani looked interested.
"What act was missing, what happened to it?" "Nothing much." Darn, it was
Cregar who was absent and she shouldn't have mentioned it. She
covered quickly. "The trainer has a bad cold. He's resting until
he gets over it. He doesn't want to give it to anyone
else." Storm said nothing but he'd
heard enough lies in his time to know one when it was thrust at
him. So did Tani. She changed the subject with more admiration
and speculation as to Prauo's origins. Laris could lose herself
in that very happily. But she was careful to suggest nothing of
the big cat's other talents. These people weren't fools. She
thought that Storm had guessed her to have been less than
truthful over the missing act she'd carelessly
mentioned. She showed them around the
other beasts, accepted an invitation to eat with them, and found
she was enjoying herself. It had been so long since she'd had
free time. Afterward she returned alone and walked toward her
cabin. Prauo's mind voice broke into her thoughts. *Dedran waits for you. His
mind churns.* With that warning she did not jump as she rounded
the corridor bend to find the man waiting. She took the
initiative swiftly. "I've made friends with them
as you asked. I think I can get them to invite me to their ranch
in a day or two. How hard do you want me to push
this?" His posture relaxed a
little. "Don't be obvious. But as quickly as you can apart from
that." Laris wanted to keep him
pleased with her. Perhaps the possibility of more information
would do that. Technology had advanced in the ten generations
since Terrans had first settled another planet. She remembered
where she had seen one of the tiny card-sized voice and picture
recorders. One of those could tape some five hundred hours of
recording, for replay on a larger machine. "What about taking one of
the mini recorders? Cregar had one I could use if he's left it
behind." She saw the last tensions
leave his body. "Too dangerous. If they spotted it they'd ask
questions. Do nothing to alert them. If they ask you to stay a
few days, you may. Don't tell them you're a bond-servant either.
I want you to get a look at their security precautions if they
have any. See as much of their land as you can." "I want to take
Prauo." His body tensed again.
"Why?" "Because they're interested
in him. The girl wants tissue samples." Dedran snickered at that
but said nothing. "And I can use him to check out security more
thoroughly. They'll think it natural I have him. The man's a
beast master, remember. He's inclined to believe that someone
with an animal is more trustworthy." She wasn't at all sure that
was true but Dedran would believe it. He did. "Very well. Prauo can go
with you if they ask you to visit and if they're happy with that.
In the morning you can drop the news that I've decided to stay a
while longer. We'll be performing here for a couple of weeks.
After that I plan to rest the animals and performers several more
weeks before we leave. See those people as often as possible
until the season is finished. After that, hint that you'd like to
see their ranches." "Ranches?" Dedran grinned nastily. "I
said your friends have money. There's the main Quade ranch in the
basin. But the old man has land in the Peaks country about five
hundred miles away, and Storm and his wife have more land running
alongside it up there. Quade mostly lives in the basin, but the
other three all spend time at the second place. There's some
strange tales about that family." Laris flicked a look at him. He
was standing there and she could tell that he'd stopped being
suspicious of her and was wondering about Storm, Logan, and Tani.
She prompted him. "Strange tales?" "Some gossip about Xik
holdout groups. Apparently Storm found one and brought in friends
to destroy it. The rumor was that he had native help. After that
there was a hush-hush deal in the desert. Some high muckymuck got
lost there and Storm went in to find him at a time the tribes
were up in arms. All of that story was hushed up by the patrol,
or so talk has it." Laris shivered. "Yeah. I don't want them
around, myself. After that there's a tale about some kind of
plague that killed natives and started in on humans. I heard that
Storm and the girl stopped it cold somehow." Laris stared, stating a
common belief in all Terran space. "Diseases don't cross species.
If it killed natives surely it wouldn't harm us?" "I know, I know. But that's
the rumor." He pushed off from where he leaned against the wall.
"You get to bed. Just remember: Tread carefully with that lot. I
want you in there with them thinking of you as a nice little girl
with a cute pussycat." He turned away abruptly and
walked off, leaving Laris looking after him. She knew the way he
thought. He was wondering if she'd find the Quade family so much
to her liking that she'd be too talkative. She'd reassured him
for the moment. But she'd have to be wary. The problem was that
she did like what she'd seen of them. But if Dedran decided to be
rid of her they'd be of no use to her and in danger themselves.
Better she should stick to what he wanted. She plodded wearily to
her cabin, moved Prauo over, and slumped down. She was asleep
almost before she pulled the hotcover over herself. For the next twelve days she
obeyed Dedran's instructions. She was openly delighted to see any
of the family whenever they appeared. She arranged for Tani to
have tissue samples from the dogs. She talked by the hour about
the circus, Prauo, and the other beasts and acts. All without
saying anything which would anger Dedran. She listened in turn to
Logan's tales of the natives, and Arzor. She noticed that despite
his apparent openness as well, he said nothing of the rumors
Dedran had heard. At first she had seen all three of the younger
family. But by the time the circus was due to close it was Logan
she saw most often. He found her by the carra
cage. "Laris, I see the show's shutting down. When do you
leave?" She smiled at him. "Not for
weeks yet. Dedran says we're all tired. We're to take a break.
We'll stay here for a few weeks and rest up before we go on to
Trastor. We have quite a long season there." Logan studied the ground.
"Do you ever get any real time off? I mean, can you leave the
circus?" "Not for good." Her reply
was quick. He looked up. "No, I mean,
could you spend time on our ranch? I could teach you to ride.
Would Dedran agree to let you come and stay with us for a few
days?" "We could ask him." She
wasn't sure how to play this. Let Dedran give her the cues. Logan
led her in search of the circus boss and once they found Dedran,
asked straightforwardly. "My father would be pleased
if Laris could stay a while with us. We'd show her Arzor. She'd
be quite safe." Yes, but would the family be safe from her, Laris
thought sadly. Dedran was considering. "I have no objection. My
ward is a sensible girl and I'm sure you would see she came to no
harm." He watched Logan react to the words. The boy was becoming
attracted. All to the good. He'd be less on his guard, and the
others, seeing him so, would accept the girl more swiftly. He
glanced kindly at his little piece of bait. "When would you like
to leave, my dear? I can have Girran take your orders. Tell him
anything he must do to care for the beasts." "Is it all right if I take
Prauo?" He nodded and she turned to Logan. "Will anyone mind if I
bring him?" Logan grinned. "Storm said
you'd probably want to. He won't try killing anything without
your say-so, will he?" She shook her head firmly. "Then it should
be fine. Be ready the day after tomorrow. I'll come with the
crawler to collect you about midmorning." His smile widened.
"It'll be great to have you at the ranch, and don't worry. You'll
have a wonderful time with us." He left Laris with Dedran
and hurried away. The girl kept her face blank knowing Dedran was
looking at her. "You know what to do?" Laris nodded. "Check out all
the security systems," she recited for him. "Map the layout of
both places. Learn the routine and who's where and when. What if
they have a safe or something? Should I try for the code? It
might help if Cregar can confuse their local patrol about the
real target." Dedran looked approvingly.
"Well thought. Yes, if you can get the safe code do so. But take
no chances. Besides, even on these rural planets, many these days
have security systems that are quite sophisticated. Not around
their property but certainly protecting a safe. If it's that
secure, then Cregar will have no time to play about." His last words were
emphasized and Laris hid another shiver. She knew the guild
methods of opening such security. It often required only the hand
which would make a print. More technical systems required a live
hand. That too could be arranged, as could the owner's voice. Few
refused to cooperate when shown a family member and told the
alternative. The guild was known for its ruthlessness. But she would enjoy this
brief time away. She could pretend that she was an ordinary girl
visiting friends. Prauo could run free, be happy, and hunt where
permitted. He'd never had the chance to do that before. Logan was
on time and she seated herself with him while Prauo jumped easily
onto the back of the crawler. "Do you have many of
these?" Logan shook his head. "Nope.
Just this one for hauling loads. Arzor uses a minimum of
technology. It breaks down, has to be fixed, and it's very
expensive to import. On the ranches we get around on horseback.
The rangers and security have copters. But only a
few." "Security, that's what you
call your local patrolmen?" Logan looked a little
surprised. "Men. What about women?" "Oh, on Kowar they'd never
have let a woman join. They only have patrolmen." "Kowar? Is that where you
come from?" "Sort of." She changed the
subject. "What's that bush? It's so pretty." He started to tell her about
the plants they passed. Then the land. By the time they were
almost at the ranch he'd forgotten the question she'd never
answered. But Laris felt she must decide. Should she tell them
the truth if they asked again? She could do so safely. The only
thing she had to hide was her exact status with Dedran. He'd
claimed her as his ward with the Quades. That was respectable.
Some planets didn't hold with the bond-system. She thought Arzor might be
one of them. And still more worlds did not approve of bonding
underage children. She'd keep silent on all that but if they
asked again she would tell the truth about the little she
remembered of the times before Meril then Kowar's De Pyall
refugee camps. She had just made the decision when the crawler
passed the Quade ranch gates and halted at the top of the rise.
Logan pointed. "Home," he said
softly. Chapter Five Laris seemed to drop into
the Quade ranch as if she had been born there. She learned to
ride with a speed that made it seem as if she'd had only to be
reminded of her skills. That did her no harm with Storm or his
father. Prauo was aloof but sensible with the other beasts of
Storm's team. His longer legs and rangy body carried him miles
alongside Laris's mount as he hardened to the exercise. He hunted
with her, the two so clearly attuned that Storm nodded
approvingly. For Prauo it was all
delightful, but it was the girl whose soul expanded in the
freedom. She reveled in being able to ride down the miles; in the
new sights, sounds, and scents. And in the quick give and take,
the clatter and chatter of family life. Logan was with her
everywhere. It was he who taught her to ride, accompanied her on
those rides, and who sat beside her at meals. They talked, sometimes
casually, sometimes with more seriousness, discussing events on
other planets as seen on the newscasts. Laris started to realize
she had a good mind. She could argue a point and make her reasons
plain. And from the camps and overheard conversations at the
circus on an assortment of planets, she had a hard-headed
appreciation of what could be contributing circumstances to the
problem as disasters unfolded. She'd been there five days when
her own origins came up again. "Logan said you came from
Kowar?" Brad Quade looked at her kindly. Laris heard the unspoken
part of the comment, that she did not look like a Kowar settler.
They'd mostly been from the Asiatic parts of old
Earth. "I said 'sort of,'" she
noted. "I don't really remember. Dedran adopted me out of the De
Pyall refugee camp on Kowar. I'd been in camps for years. That
was just the latest. But I was at the camp there for the last two
years so I think of Kowar as where I came from, I
guess." Brad looked interested.
"What do you remember from before that?" Laris leaned her chin on her
fists. "Not a lot." She thought back. "I was on a ship with
others. No one I knew. I was eight or nine. We landed at Meril
and I was there maybe a couple of years. Before that another
camp. Ermaine I think. The camp before that they called De Pyall
as well. It might have been on Yohal. My mother was still alive.
I think I might have been four or five." Storm looked up. "What
happened to your mother?" "She died," Laris said
briefly. "She got sick. I think there were a lot of deaths in
that camp. A woman looked after me for a while. She went to a
different ship when they moved us again." Brad's voice was gentle.
"Don't talk about this if it distresses you." The girl shook her head.
"It's old. It doesn't bother me." "Then, what do you remember
about your mother? What did others call her when they spoke? Did
she ever tell you stories of some place?" Brad leaned forward.
"Do you remember any names, words that don't match other places
you've been?" Laris looked
back—into the blank times. The times
when she must have been loved and protected. When maybe she'd had
a family of her own. They were still as they had always been for
her ever since. Blank. "I think I was sick when my
mother was. I don't remember much about her. No names or people.
Sometimes I think I dream. But I can't remember anything when I
wake." She shrugged. "It doesn't matter." Brad nodded. "But you know
your name," he said quietly. She answered without
thinking. "I'm Laris. I've always been Laris." "Yes." The tone was
contemplative. "Yes, you are. Your name is the first thing you
learn as a child and probably the last thing you forget. If it
could be discovered where you come from, would you like to
know?" She thought about it.
Knowing wouldn't cut her any slack with Dedran. But it would be
nicer, good to be able to say that she was Laris of a particular
place, not just a camp stray. She felt a sudden surprising flare
of hunger. She'd like to know. She said so and Brad
nodded. "I'll make
inquiries." It was two days later before
something dawned on the girl. If Brad started at the De Pyall
camp on Kowar, the records there would show that she'd been
bonded, not adopted. She thought of trying to persuade Brad to
drop the idea, but it was probably too late. Anyway she could
always say she'd just signed papers. That she'd thought it was an
adoption. After all, she'd been twelve. Uneducated, ignorant,
straight from a camp. Brad would believe that. She was wrong but it would
be months before she found out how wrong. It wasn't spoken about
again until she was due to return to the circus for a
day. "Laris, we'd like you to
come back to the ranch once you've seen the animals are well.
Would you like to do that?" Brad's smile was gentle. "Yes. If Dedran says I can.
It's fun on the ranch." Her rare grin lit up her face. Beside her
Logan bit back a sigh. He loved to make her smile. Laris smiled
seldom and often tentatively, as if she wasn't sure she should.
Considering what his father had discovered so far that wasn't
surprising. Camp records had disclosed that the girl had been
about ten when she arrived on Kowar. No known family. She'd left
again at twelve. Brad had checked how it was
that a twelve-year-old had walked out of a refugee camp. He'd
found her bond registered with another office. Except that the
bond claimed her as sixteen. All of them could guess the reasons
for that. Logan would have discussed their discoveries so far
with Laris but Brad forbade it. "I believe Laris knew she
was bonded but hopes I won't have discovered that. She lied,
probably out of shame; being bonded is quite a stigma on some
planets. A child learns pragmatism in a refugee camp and
accepting a bond was probably her only way out. Letting her know
we've found out would spoil her time here. She wants to know
where she came from and who she is. Leave it lie,
son." Logan had. At almost
twenty-one he was discovering reasons why people could be
fragile, but it had made him gentler with her. Storm, guessing at
more than Logan could know of what Laris's life had been like,
remained suspicious. A child growing up in the camps learned to
care about their own needs first. Ethics would have gone to the
wall as Laris fought to survive. He watched her with Prauo and
later with the meercats and Surra. She was a natural. The animals
liked and trusted her and she seemed to know by instinct what
they wanted. After that thought his gaze on her sharpened; it
could be he was right in his belief, that she had the true beast
master empathy as well. Maybe that was why the
circus boss had bonded her. Anyone whose livelihood or passion
was beasts would pay highly for someone that good. Perhaps his
allowing her to visit the ranch was simply an employer making
sure a valuable employee was content. He let his suspicions lapse
temporarily and rode out with his wife, his brother, and Laris
the next day. Tani was on Destiny, the silver three-quarter
duocorn mare which was her usual mount. Her coyotes put up a merin
deer and all of them chased it laughing, not too serious in the
pursuit. Minou and Ferarre joined in the spirit of it as the deer
ran, their tongues lolling out in amusement. The deer doubled,
twisted, and finally shook them off. She paused to look back at
them from a small rise as her pursuers halted. Laris started to
laugh. "She looks so surprised. As
if she thinks we're all mad." Her laugher was infectious and even
Storm chuckled. "It will keep her in
practice." "Oh," Laris said in
mock-amazed tones. "So that's why we chased her. We're exercising
the wildlife. Maybe we should find a few more. After all, Logan
said that it's the growing season. The animals could be getting
fat. Don't you think it would be a kindness to keep that from
happening?" "Couldn't we just set up a
gymnasium for them?" Tani murmured. "That way they can exercise
and we don't have to do half the work." Storm looked at her. "Deer,
deer. Aren't we lazy." Logan groaned at the pun.
"Puhlease. I only had breakfast a while ago. I may be sick."
Laris was laughing again, a joyous carefree sound which somehow
warmed them all. "It isn't breakfast," she
said sweetly. "It's as I said. Logan's just exercising the
wild..." she paused and added the final word, "life." This time they all moaned.
Tani snorted. "Laris, you're being corrupted. That has to be one
of the worst puns I've heard in years." Laris giggled. Storm
studied her from the corner of his eye. She looked like a child
when she was happy. But she wasn't. Brad said from the records
she must be somewhere between sixteen and seventeen. So far he'd
traced her to Ermaine. Still no more name than Laris. No planet
of origin. No family listed. He knew what it had done to
him to be alone before he found his stepfather and half-brother.
What had it done to her? It hadn't broken her. But things like
that could warp and twist in ways which often weren't apparent to
an outsider. Then too, small children could be amazingly
resilient. Maybe she'd come out of the camps mind-whole. Brad
thought she had, and his stepfather was a shrewd man. Storm sat
back as his mount ambled after the others. Logan liked her. But
Storm was very fond of his younger half-brother. He didn't want
the boy hurt. Ahead, Laris dropped from
her horse to reach out slowly within a small jumble of recently
cracked rock. Prauo came trotting back to stare at her find. She
cradled it in her hand and showed it to them, eyes wide with
pleasure. "I saw the sun catch it.
Look, isn't it pretty?" Storm glanced at the
cat's-eye gem. "It's valuable too." "Oh," she hesitated then
held it up to him. "It was on your land." Storm realized that both his
wife and brother were glaring at him. He shook his head. "Finders
keepers." Logan took it from her
carefully and turned it over in his fingers. "That last frosty
night, it would have split the rock this was in." He touched her
arm. "Storm was teasing. It's pretty but it's the green ones
which are really valuable. This is gold. It isn't a large stone
either. It would take ten or twelve of them to make a green one's
value. But it's yours. You found it. Just don't start digging
holes like a Djimbut to see if you can find more." Laris took the gem back. She
admired the gold color with the black line like a pupil which
split it in two. She pointed. "Is that why they're called
cat's-eye stones?" "Yes. Look." Prauo had moved
to her side and was looking to see what his sister-without-fur
had. "It would look just like one of his eyes if it was purple,"
Logan pointed out. Laris nodded. "But I'd
rather he had his own eyes than I had this. It's very pretty
though." It was, she thought. And Dedran would have it from her
as soon as he saw it and once they were away from Arzor. "What's
a green one worth?" If this one was still quite valuable it might
give her a chance to escape. She could keep Dedran from knowing
about it if she was careful. Logan thought a moment.
"Don't see many green cat's-eye stones. But I think the last
good-sized one went for about five thousand credits on the
market. That gold one would be worth around a hundred credits
maybe, considering the size." Laris kept her face blank
but Storm saw the sudden glitter of her eyes. That had surprised
her. To a camp child a stone worth only a fraction of the value
Logan had quoted on a green cat's-eye gem was still real riches.
He was right. To Laris it meant jumping ship and still having
enough to survive at least a half year on the stone's price. It
could mean safety, freedom from Dedran and the guild. The guild
wouldn't look for her. And they might keep Dedran moving on, too
busy to turn back and seek her out. Smiling, she dropped the
stone in a pocket. She nudged her horse up alongside Logan's
mount and continued an earlier conversation. Tani dropped back
with Storm. "Has Brad found out any more
about her?" "Nope. He's still chasing
through Ermaine's bureaucracy. They closed the refugee camp they
had there about seven years ago. Just over a half year after
Laris was shipped out. They claim that a lot of the records were
dumped after five years." "Claim?" "Uh huh. Brad thinks they're
holding out for a bribe to look." Tani smiled unpleasantly.
"Let me at the com when we get back," she said, referring to the
ranch's method of communication, not only locally, but also
planet to planet. "Aunt Kady would enjoy lighting a fire under a
few bureaucrats. The ark's important to most planetary
governments. Aunt Kady asks, Aunt Kady gets. And if I can tell
her we've got tissue samples from two Terran dogs she hasn't
found before, she'll get those records if she has to go there
herself. I don't think she has many carra samples
either." Storm knew Tani's Aunt Kady.
She was a scientist. Nothing deterred her when she was on a
trail. And it was true she'd be delighted about the dogs. He
touched his mount into a canter to catch up with Laris and Logan.
He addressed the girl. "Would Dedran mind having a
scientist take tissue samples from your carra as
well?" "I don't think so." Laris
frowned. "Why would they want to?" Tani had caught up with
them. She explained how Terra had created a space-faring ark with
beasts and embryos in stasis, with huge tissue banks, all to save
Earth's flora and fauna if the worst happened. "And it did. But
the ark was safe," Tani said softly. "Now my aunt and uncle seek
out other Terran animals or rare ones from other worlds and take
samples to hold. She'll be so pleased about the dogs' samples you
got us already but carra are quite rare too." "What if something happened
to the ark?" Laris was fascinated. "Then we'd still have the
samples. They split those into three. Two others go to planets
with groundside storage facilities. They're held in those as
well. Lately Uncle Brion's been talking about increasing the
groundside places to five. That way it would be even less likely
everything could be destroyed." She started to tell Laris
about her days on the ark. Then how she had come to Arzor. The
girl listened, wondering if she should say anything about the
rumors Dedran had heard. But she didn't know who'd told him.
Maybe he wasn't supposed to know. Tani and Storm had said nothing
and it sounded like an exciting tale. Surely if it was all right
to tell it they would have. In the end she listened with interest
but asked few questions and those carefully chosen. The next week passed
quickly. Then there were only a few more days. Dedran had commed
the ranch to say they would up-ship in five days. The call had
come in late one afternoon, insisting Laris must be back well
before the ship's departure to see to the animals. Few of them
enjoyed takeoff. Some started becoming agitated early as they
understood that the time was coming. She could have another three
days. She hoped Brad would hear
from the Ermaine camp before she had to go. Tani had taken
samples of tissue from the carra and sent those and the dog
tissue to the ark. Kady hadn't received them as yet, although she
had mentioned getting the message asking her to interrogate
Ermaine's people. She'd replied she'd do her best and that was
the last they'd heard. Laris sighed. Perhaps even a
scientist who knew people still hadn't enough influence to open
those files. She dimly recalled some strange events at the camp
shortly before she was transferred. It was likely that
there—as in many places during and after
the war—there'd been corruption. The
people involved wouldn't want records found. And others wouldn't
want such events exposed. It could reflect badly on the current
government. Besides, would all of this be worth the effort? She
was in the ranch house the next evening when she decided to ask
the one who'd know. "Mr. Quade, if Tani's aunt
does get the camp records opened, what could you
find?" "Your full name for a start.
I had a search done in Kowar. They have no record of you as other
than 'Laris.' No last name in their records. But many of the
camp's records simply list the adults of the family who arrived
and note 'with three minor children,' giving only the children's
first names. "If we had your full name we
could track that. Once we had the full records we could trace how
you came there and from what planet." He looked at her kindly.
"It takes time to do that sort of thing, Laris. But governments
thrive on records. They're there somewhere." He paused. "I know
it seems like a long time to you. But it's only ten or twelve
years. A few seconds to a planetary government." The girl twisted her hands
together. "There were some things that went on..." Her voice
trailed away and Brad Quade understood. "In the camps? And you think
some people in power now might not want to remember them? That's
very likely. But I can make it clear to them there's no legal
trouble in mind. Don't worry. I know you have to leave soon. I'll
get the circus schedule and spacegram any information that comes
in. Or won't Dedran like that?" She thought. "I think he
won't mind. But maybe if you sent it to the port office for
collection. I could just pick it up there when we
land." He nodded. "I'll do
that." He returned to the book he
was reading and Laris departed quietly. She adored the excellent
library the ranch owned and understood that a reader liked to
read in peace. She read late most nights in her bedroom and her
companions were amused at the wide variety in her
reading. The three days passed. Laris
sat down to her last meal at the ranch and was conscious of
sadness. Prauo sprawled behind her. He'd eaten earlier but
preferred to stay with Laris. She kept her face blank but the
others were beginning to know that look. It meant that emotion
lurked and the girl was determined not to show it. They combined
to make her laugh, sharing old jokes and retelling amusing
incidents. Finally she excused herself.
If she didn't leave she was going to cry. Laris, who hadn't cried
since she was six and had learned she would never see her mother
again. That she must move on alone. *You are sad,
sister-without-fur.* *I won't see them again.
Dedran's going to do something awful to them and they'll never
forgive me.* *You could warn
them.* She sent nothing in reply.
Better he not know that Dedran had once made a threat which had
turned her heart cold with terror. But the big cat had learned.
He picked it from her mind in part, guessing the rest. *You keep
silent for my sake. Well, they have each other. We have only the
two of us. But if there is a chance, if we escape, then warn
them.* *I will.* She read late that final
night. Losing herself in the adventures of another. She rose to
eat and then to take one last ride with Tani and Logan. Only
Logan was there. "Tani had to talk to people
at the Peaks ranch. It'll be just the two of us. Do you
mind?" She shook her head. How
could she mind a few hours alone with a man she was coming to
care about? But she mustn't think of that. Once Dedran struck,
Logan would hate her. A hopeful part of her mind pointed out that
Logan might never know she'd been involved in whatever Dedran did
to the Quade family. She could get away from the circus
boss. Use the cat's-eye gem to buy passage back to
Arzor. And what, the sensible part
of her brain pointed out, what would she do if she got back and
found Logan had just been being kind to her? How would she feel
if he was surprised to see her? If she was just a nuisance coming
back where she wasn't really wanted? It wasn't Logan's ranch. It
belonged to his father. Mr. Quade had been nice and he was
helping find her background. But then by now he must know a few
things she'd rather he hadn't discovered. He wasn't likely to
want her back either, even if he was being nice about the
records. She rode with Logan,
laughed, and galloped her pony. She hid what she felt and
concentrated on enjoying her hours before she must go. Live for
the day. It was all she had. She had no way of knowing how her
eyes mirrored her thoughts whenever she remembered she was
leaving, even as she twisted her face into a smile. They turned back to the
ranch house in the distance. Laris halted her pony for a brief
moment. She sat looking at the only place where she'd been happy
in so many years. She wondered if her own home, wherever it had
been, had been as nice. Had she had family there? Been a happy
child surrounded with love? She shrugged. What was gone was gone.
She heeled the pony into a gallop and forgot her sorrow briefly
in the joy of speed. "Laris?" She turned to Logan
as they slowed, trotting the ponies into the big
corral. "Yes." "You can come back, you
know. Anytime the circus is on Arzor. You'd be welcome
here." "Thanks. But it's the only
time we've landed here since I've been with them. I guess we may
not be back for years." She held her mouth in a firm line. She
would not whimper like a motherless cub. She would
not! Logan took her hand, glanced
quickly around. No one in sight. He tipped her chin up with the
other hand and brought his mouth down on hers. Her lips were
warm, sweet with a startled half-shy response; then she freed
herself quietly. "Maybe I shouldn't have done
that," he told her. "But I'm not sorry." "Neither am I." Then she was
running for the ranch door. It had felt strange. She'd fought in
the camps to stop anyone touching her and succeeded. Not until
now had she understood how that had deadened her emotions. For
many years she'd touched only Prauo and the animals. With Logan
it had felt good. No coercion. Just safety, warmth. A melting
inside. Her mouth went wry. Logan
hadn't said, "Come back." Just, "Stay with us if the circus is
back on Arzor." And if Dedran knew how she felt he'd never trust
her again. But she couldn't let him harm her friends here. Yet
how could she stop it? She did her best as they dropped her at
the edge of the circus area. "Storm." She held his eyes
with her own, willing him to understand. "Tani's aunt can take
other samples if she meets the circus. Sometimes tissue samples
can be worth a lot. There's always someone who wants to use
things. Other samples, other reasons." She turned away, hoping
he'd understood enough to take care. "Logan, I'll miss you. Thank
you all for letting me stay at the ranch." She spun, hiding her
face as she ran. By the time she and Prauo reached her cabin she
had herself under control again. It was just as well. Dedran met
her. "There's been a message from
Cregar. He was successful at Trastor and he's going on to Lereyne
to meet us there. Get the hidden cage ready. We'll need it for
the wolf he's got. Get on with your work now that you're back."
He paused as he studied her face. "I hope you learned plenty.
You'll have to tell it all to Cregar. Did you get to their place
in the Peaks?" She nodded. "Good. What about security
systems?" "Only corns and computer
lock-codes. No security in the houses apart from the animals.
There is a safe. Lock-coded. I couldn't get the code." That was a
lie but it was a secondary target. Dedran probably wouldn't care
much. He didn't. "Too bad. But Cregar should
be able to get in, gas the beasts, and get out again. What's he
likely to find?" "That depends on what's
there on the day he picks. Unless he's very unlucky there should
be several animals." "Right. Go and fix that
cage. We up-ship in a few hours. I've decided to leave a day
earlier and I let you stay longer. It does seem to have been
worth it but I need you for the animals now." He gave her a
shove. "Don't think you can come back and be idle, my dear ward."
The last words were a sneer as he turned away. Laris nodded. No, she
wouldn't make that mistake. She plodded in the direction of the
animal hold. She was leaving, she could never return, and all her
world was dark right now. Nothing mattered anymore. She worked hard for the next
half day as she reassured the beasts, prepared the hidden cage to
receive Cregar's victim, and now and again listened to
conversations. They were taking on two new people, desperate men
from the port who'd never quite settled on this new world. They
were already planning an act on the high wire. They'd seen it
done, thought it looked easy enough. The girl sighed. Others had thought that. It
was one of the things which brought crowds. This pair would end
up on a new world. But at least here they'd been whole,
undamaged. On Trastor once they'd failed it would still be a new
world but now they'd be injured as well, maybe permanently
crippled or dead. *In which case they'll have
no more problems,* Prauo sent. Laris grinned. The big cat
was such a realist at times. She waited until no one was about
and moved to where the largest cage stood in isolation. It held
the five tigerbats. They sometimes reached out for those who
passed and most people in the circus gave it a wide berth. Just
as well. It had secrets other than the inhabitants. She drifted around to the
rear of the cage, pressed two places on a panel, and leaned hard.
A door-sized piece of the back slid aside. Laris entered,
stooping through the entrance, light already in her hand. She
turned slowly. It wasn't dirty; she could sweep it though. There
was a little dust. There were built-in containers for food and
water. She would bring bedding. *If there is anything left
alive to sleep there,* came to her. She had to agree. Cregar and
his abductions certainly hadn't been so successful in the
past. *I'll clean it and put down
bedding anyway.* She found she was thinking
of Storm as she worked. He was so calm, so self-contained. How
would he react to the disappearance of some of his team? She
wished she didn't have to know about that. Or to be involved. It
was betraying the people who'd been kind to her. Then camp life
came back to her. None of them were her kin. They had no claim on
her. *I too am not kin to you,
sister-without-fur. Yet our hearts are bound together. What of
Logan?* Within the hidden cage Laris
paused in her sweeping. The name conjured up the touch of his
hand on her face, his lips warm and gentle on hers. Sorrow swept
over her. *Logan will never forgive me
if he finds out. And if I ever see him again I think he'd know
just by looking at me. Our only hope is to get away before they
take Storm's beasts.* There was a long silence while she finished
her work. She peered through the tiny viewer in the cage panel,
then the viewer which looked out through the tigerbat portion in
the front. No one was about. She slid aside the panel, stepped
out, snapped it shut swiftly, then emerged from behind the
cage. Dedran caught up with her a
short time later. "Is the cage ready?" "It's clean. I've put in
fresh bedding. The food and water containers have been scrubbed.
I can fill them when the wolf arrives. Everything works well. The
viewer lenses are clean. The panel moves easily and without
making noise." "Very well. Cregar has
messaged. He's coming here. He'll land before we leave. The wolf
will be transhipped to the circus and you'll get the animal under
cover in the cage the minute Cregar is up the ramp.
Understand?" She nodded. Why the change
of plan? What had happened on Lereyne that Dedran would turn
everything on its head and leave earlier than planned? Had Cregar
started some kind of trouble and had to run? She asked no
questions on that score. By the look on Dedran's face it would be
unhealthy. She could ask one question safely. "What about food for the
animal? I could give it some of the carcass the tigerbats
have." Dedran's reply was a snarl.
"Give it whatever is suitable. Damn thing may not be eating
anyway. Just be ready to help once Cregar arrives. We could have
to delay liftoff." He departed, walking in a way which showed he
would like to stamp but didn't want to draw attention. It looked
as if things really had gone wrong somewhere, Laris thought.
Cregar coming here. Liftoff first advanced then delayed. She
wondered if those at the ranch knew about the abduction of a
beast master's wolf. Chapter Six On Quade land, Storm entered
the ranch house to find his father coming to look for him. His
face was hard with anger. "Asizi?" Storm used the Navaho word
in reaction to that anger. "What is it?" "Kady Carraldo has just
spoken to the ranger station at port. They linked corns so she
could speak directly to us. There's been a beast master murdered
on Lereyne. An old employee of hers talked to her from
there." "A beast master," Storm
muttered, shocked. "Murdered how, why?" "Apparently to take the
remaining member of his team. Kady says the man was supposed to
be in the city all day. His wolf was left at home. Those who took
it probably knew all that. The trouble was that the man came home
early. They think he tried to prevent his animal being taken and
someone hit him too hard in a panic." Storm considered
that. "It sounds likely." But his
father's anger was too great to explain it as just the death of a
man none of them knew. "What else?" Brad Quade stared at the
silent com. "Kady says she has been told by authorities there
that it fits other abductions of animals from teams and the
murders of their beast masters. She has no idea why it's
happening but she can now list seven separate occasions beside
this one. There could be more which haven't been passed on as
yet." "But ... but. That must be
almost every beast master left alive after the war." His father shook his head.
"No. Most of the dead were trainees. They had teams but they had
never been in the fighting. Maybe that's why they're being
targeted. They're easier to take than you veterans." Storm's mind was clicking
over. "Get me a list of names and where they were when they died.
How long they'd been there and any other details you can
find." "No need. Kady downloaded
all that over the link. Here." He handed over a sheaf of
paper. Storm reached without looking for the nearest chair,
dragged it to him, and sat, already reading. At last he looked
up. "What do you think,
Asizi?" "You first." "It seems clear to me. The
first killing was a man I served with. He was no pushover and his
team was trained. I'd say the animals fought, he picked up on
that, and came running. He killed a couple of the kidnappers, the
animals got a third and the leader of the kidnappers made a clean
sweep to avoid witnesses. He couldn't get the bodies away so he
picked them clean of ID and left them. The authorities say the
dead men were port scum, they'd do anything if they were
paid." Brad sat back. "Uh-huh. Go
on." "After that whoever was
running this operation decided that us veterans were too tough.
He started trying for trainees. It looks as if he got away with a
few animals but it wouldn't do him any good." "Why not?" Storm's mouth twisted as if
the words tasted sour. "Because with the trainees High Command
was trying something different and more advanced. They were
mind-bonding the trainees' teams to them. Not just a mental link
of the kind I have, more of a complete bonding. The communication
between leader and team was clearer and could reach farther when
they were apart. High Command believed it would work better out
in the field. They found instead that it didn't work as well so
they stopped it after that initial group had been bonded. If the
war hadn't ended they'd have gone back to the way they used with
me." He paused and accepted the
drink Brad offered. "Thanks. Sure the bonding made for a closer
team. A good team could be used almost like your own extensions.
But it was more trouble than it was of use. If a beast master was
injured, his team went berserk. If he was killed, his team would
die. They found that out after there were a couple of training
accidents. If some fool tried to kidnap a trainee team they'd
fight like the possessed. If their leader was badly injured
they'd go crazy. If he was killed they'd die within a few days
too." He sat thinking. "What do we
know? That someone somewhere is trying to steal beast master
animals. If the beast master tries to prevent that he's killed.
It's possibly one man doing it under orders and using local
criminals as gun fodder. But why? It doesn't make
sense." "Would animals like that
breed true? Maybe they're setting up teams of their
own." Storm eyed him grimly.
"They'd breed true if they could keep them alive. Setting up
teams would be harder. But who and for what purpose?" Brad stood. "I'll talk to
Kelson. He's head of the ranger divisions here, and he can reach
security on other planets and be listened to. So can Kady. We'll
alert everyone we can. High Command should have a list of
surviving beast masters and where they went. Brion can talk to
them as well." He turned to reach for the com then grinned wryly
at Storm. "At least it isn't Xiks this time." Storm snorted. "Makes it
worse, not better. Xiks don't know us as well as our own do. I'll
go and find Logan. He can take Surra and the others up to the
Peaks ranch. I want them out of the way just in case." He strode
out, leaving Brad looking after him. Storm still hadn't grasped
Brad's fear. If the trainee beasts all died or were killed as had
already happened to some of them, the hunters would return
looking for the veteran teams again. Storm could be next on the
list. But Storm had understood
very well. He spoke to Logan, then to Kelson. A copter landed a
day later. Surra and her mate were loaded, along with Baku and
Lazo, her mate. Hing came scampering to Storm's call bringing her
tribe. They too were loaded. Logan went with them. He leaned out
before the copter lifted. "What about
Tani?" "She's with the clan. If you
think some port filth could casually drop in there and kill her,
steal the coyotes, Mandy and Destiny, then she's in danger." His
tone was slightly sarcastic. Logan grinned. Half a year
ago Tani had ended a menace to the natives. Not the more
civilized Norbies alone, but also the savage Nitra tribes of
Arzor. She'd been adopted into the Nitra's Djimbut clan as one of
them. It was only the second time in the history of human
settlement on Arzor that it had happened. The Nitra were
warriors, frequently at war with each other. Constantly alert,
and honed into fighters without betters on Arzor. No criminal
from the port would sneak up on the clan. If they thought to do
so they'd have a rude awakening, and a very unpleasant
death. Storm pushed his hand at his
half-brother. "Go, go. I'll talk to Tani when she gets back but
she'd planned to be gone a ten-day. Just take care of yourself."
He watched the copter lift off and then felt a chill run down his
spine. Maybe he'd take his stallion Rain-on-Dust and ride out to
the clan lands. Tani had taken the small comunit but the ride
would be pleasant. Talking at length on the unit was still not
being with her, and he wished to be. She and the clan should be
warned too of a possible attempt on Tani and her team. She was
beast master in abilities and in her bond with her team, but
she'd never been trained in war. There were things he could say
to the clan warriors about the abductions of beasts and the
killing of beast masters which would put them on their
guard. He smiled a little to
himself, and his face warmed in a way seldom seen by any but his
family. He'd still pity a man who tried to separate Tani from her
beasts. His wife might not be trained but there was warrior
heritage there. She would not submit easily. He entered the house
again just as his father clicked off the comceiver. "That was Kady and Brion.
They say we're to take care of their niece." Storm nodded,
waiting. "Brion talked to High Command. They'll com every beast
master they can reach. Several veterans went into the new survey
department that started after the war. They should be safe, half
the time that lot don't know where they are themselves. We can
add another death to that list of Kady's. A trainee again. And
another body they've traced to their port." "How long ago?" "The bodies have been there
for weeks." He stopped Storm's exclamation with a raised hand.
"Not incompetence. The man went off into the bush somewhere,
built himself a hut, and started acting as a ranger for the
native wildlife. It was all on a voluntary basis, he was living
on his veteran's pension, so he had no regular reporting
schedule. They only saw him two, maybe three times a year. He'd
left a message on his com asking callers to call back in a few
weeks. He said he was off on a survey of wildlife
numbers." Storm swore bitterly.
"Either someone knew that or they were just lucky. I suppose
someone wanted to talk to the man and couldn't wait, or he'd
still be out there." "Us, we started it. High
Command passed on the warning. One of his ranger friends in the
wildlife department thought he should know at once. When they
kept getting the same message someone else remembered they'd
called him a month back and heard it before. His friend went out
just in case and to pass on the warning. They found him dead with
another body, and signs others had been hurt. His beasts were all
dead as well, killed apparently while fighting to protect their
master or to keep from being taken. They can't be one hundred
percent certain but they think the deaths occurred thirty-five to
forty days ago." Brad and Storm sat thinking
silently. At last Brad spoke again. "I'd say that it might be a
good idea to ride out and talk to Tani and the clan about all of
this." "I'm going in the morning.
I'll suggest either she stays out with the clan or she goes up to
the Peaks ranch to stay with Logan." His stepfather rose slowly.
"Well enough. Get some sleep then." He remembered something.
"Wasn't Logan going down to the port to see that girl
leave?" "Uh-huh. He's catching a
ride with Kelson. The man's running around holding meetings about
frawn numbers just now. Some of the ranchers are risking
over-grazing their land up there. Then Kelson will take him back
to the Peaks later on. Don't worry, Asizi. Everything will
be well." But he felt again that small cold shiver and
wondered. In the ship Laris finished
tucking the wolf away in the hidden section of the cage. It was
breathing badly and she was concerned. Cregar stood beside her
looking down at it. "It isn't
injured." "There are different kinds
of injuries," Laris said sadly. "I don't think this one will make
it either. Tell Dedran I'll do my best but it's samples he's
likely to be sending on. Not a live beast." From the corner of
her eye she caught a half-satisfied look on the man's face.
Didn't he want the guild to succeed then? Cregar grunted and
walked to peer from the viewer. "No one is about. Make very
sure no one sees you coming in or out of that cage. There are
half a dozen governments who would hang us all if they ever find
out we're responsible for kidnapping Terran animals and killing
beast masters. It's only a matter of time too before the
authorities on one of the planets who've lost animals post a
reward." He saw her flinch. "Once that happens everyone in any
port will be on the lookout for something odd to use to try and
claim a reward. You know Dedran. Bring him down and he'll make
sure we all go with him. Only way for us to be safe would be if
he's dead before the authorities find him." The last words had
been spoken almost to himself. He slid the panel aside and
stepped through, closing it with a quiet click behind him. Laris
stared after him. Now what had that last comment meant? Was he
suggesting she should kill Dedran? Or that Cregar might? She sat
down beside the sedated animal and smoothed its fur. Poor beast,
it hadn't asked to be kidnapped and brought here. She'd try to
keep it alive, but was that right? Would it want to live without
friend or kin? She turned the thought
aside. She couldn't kill it. Humans had done enough to cause it
distress. Not that it would matter. About her she could feel the
small sounds which indicated liftoff shortly. She must go out.
Dedran would want her to pass on his orders, check other animals.
She hoped that Logan might find time to see her before the ship
lifted. Dedran did want her. He kept
her busy until suddenly Logan appeared. Then the circus boss
smiled. Laris eyed that look suspiciously. It boded no good for
someone when the man looked that pleased with himself. He placed
a heavy hand on her shoulder. "Take your friend into the
small group cabin. You have half an hour to say your good-byes
then he'll have to go." The small group cabin, Laris
noted. And that's bugged. He'll know every word we say. But if we
don't go then I'll pay later on. There'll be a chance on the way
back though. I can say he grabbed me, kept kissing me and
wouldn't let go. That's if Dedran realizes we took a while longer
to get to the ramp after we left the cabin. She'd chance that.
Although maybe she could encourage Logan into suggesting a side
trip somewhere. To see the animals again perhaps. They reached the cabin, she
slid the door shut, and Logan started talking. Laris bit back a
groan as she saw where his warnings were leading. He was afraid
for her. But he was revealing at the same time just how much was
known. Dedran would be interested, furious, and afraid. Someone
out there was stealing animals. The smart ones. Prauo might be
taken, or her tigerbats, Logan insisted. She must be careful.
These people had killed again and again. She couldn't shut him up too
abruptly. Dedran would listen to this. If he was suspicious of
her she could do nothing and might not survive. Laris waited
until a suitable place in Logan's warnings. "So I had to let you know
before you left." She laid a finger softly against his lips. He
had more to say but she'd prefer Dedran didn't hear
it. "You're kind. Thank you but
I'll be safe here." She pointed at the door, raising her
eyebrows. Now if only he didn't say the wrong thing. Logan
assumed she wished to show him the animals to demonstrate their
safety. He nodded. "Of course. It's unusual for
anyone to have five of them." She had the door open and was
leading him out quickly, before he opened his mouth again and
said something Dedran could use. She was too late. Logan halted in the doorway
to talk again. "You will be careful. Storm's got me tucked away
up at the Peaks ranch with his beasts. Tani's with the Djimbut
clan in the lower foothills. We're safe but I worry about
you." Laris kept her voice steady
with a huge effort. He'd just told Dedran everything the circus
boss would need to know in order to find Storm or Tani's teams.
"Don't worry. I'll be all right." Too true she would be. Because
Cregar was going to be at High Peaks just as soon as the circus
was on Lereyne and innocently doing shows for the local
population there. Logan gathered her into the
circle of one arm. "Are you sure? There'd be no objections if you
wanted to come back with me." He stopped abruptly. Damn. She
couldn't do that. Brad had said the girl was bonded to Dedran, no
matter that the man had referred to her as his ward. Laris was thinking quickly.
Dedran wouldn't release her. The bond had several months yet to
run. The circus boss would see to it that Laris didn't take
Prauo. She had no proof of ownership and he could delay legal
attempts to repossess Prauo, up-ship, and then claim Prauo had
died on the trip. Apart from that, Cregar was planning to steal
Storm's or Tani's beasts. If he succeeded she might be the only
one standing between Dedran and a dead team. She remembered Hing and her
troop. Small, merry, and so charming, Laris had been constantly
giggling whenever she watched them. Surra, beautiful in her pride
and dignity, so gracious toward her mate. And the eagles, Baku
who had unbent sufficiently to accept a piece of meat from
Laris's hand. No, if Dedran succeeded she must be at the circus.
Her presence might save them still. She mourned inside but she
must not show that. She smiled, her mouth
stretching upward but her eyes miserable. "No, I couldn't leave
the circus. I have a place here. And anyway, I'm quite certain
I'll be safe. Now come and see the tigerbats before you have to
leave." Logan followed her. He
admired the five carnivores who watched him sleepily. The largest
came to be stroked. "It's amazing how gentle he
seems when you know what they can do." "They aren't vicious," Laris
objected. "They're just predators. Kreel is quite clever." She
sighed. "I wish one day they could go back home. I know they
couldn't ever be free to swarm again. But if they had a really
large pen so they could have a few babies..." Logan gaped. "Some are
females in there?" "Of course." She pointed at
the two smaller tigerbats. "They are. I have to put a
contraceptive in their water so they can't breed. We've only had
them a year and they're two. Too young to breed safely as yet.
But it would be so nice for them if they could have a family one
day." Without thinking Logan
hugged her. "You have a good heart." Laris stiffened then relaxed
in his arms. He lowered his mouth to hers and for long seconds
they clung. Then she freed herself gently. "I have to take you down the
ramp. Dedran will be expecting to see you leave." He allowed her
to walk with him to where Dedran was indeed waiting. The tall man
glared as they came in sight. Logan took her hand and held
it briefly. "We shall look forward to seeing you again if you
land here." He nodded politely to Dedran. "You too, Honored Sir.
But I must hurry, there's always work." He turned to look at
Laris, his face hidden from the circus boss. Out of the man's
sight Logan's lips framed words. "We have a place for you
always." Then he was hurrying down the ramp to where Kelson
waited impatiently. The ship's ramp whined as it was raised to
close. The last sight Laris saw was Logan's hand waving as they
drove away. She made her face blank as she turned. Dedran caught her by the
shoulder. "Don't get ideas, girl. That fancy first-ship family
would never touch you if they knew what you were." Laris spun. "What was I?"
she snarled despite herself. "I was an orphan like a million from
the war. I was bonded illegally and we both know it. I've never
done anything to be ashamed of." Dedran smiled at her furious
face. His own eyes were cold and dead. "Dear, dear. Is that what
you think? And how would your fancy friends like to hear that
you've been up to your little neck in espionage, theft, and
murder? I can prove you've helped me often enough with the first
two. And you knew what Cregar did on his trips. It was you who
cared for the animals and took samples when they died. Try
convincing any authority you were innocent." He smiled again as
her defiance wilted, shoulders hunching in surrender. She'd
showed signs of becoming too interested in the Quade boy. It felt
good to remind her that she was merely property. "Get on with your work. We
have clearance to lift." He walked arrogantly away, pausing at
the end of the passage to make sure she was obeying his
instruction. She kept her cowed look as
she headed for the animal hold. Let the circus boss believe he
had convinced her there was no hope of using the Quades to escape
Dedran's grip. But inside she was recalling something she'd
accessed in the library at Yohal. There was a law on all
Terran-settled planets stating that a bond-servant could not be
held accountable for her master's misdeeds or her own under
orders if she had no opportunity to inform, she feared crippling
reprisals if she attempted to inform and failed, or—if she was in danger of death, or
if she was saving another under that same threat. Laris could
plead three of the four; the last for Prauo. She'd also been bonded
illegally young as she could prove with the camp records. She
could claim duress on a minor which would be even more
convincing. Cases she'd read showed that courts tended to look
even less favorably on punishing a child forced into crimes. She
set about her chores with a lighter heart. Her reading skills
might save her yet. Chapter Seven Laris worked on, knowing
that Dedran would be listening to the record of her talk with
Logan. In a few days he'd ask her to expand on the Peaks ranch.
Her bond-master and Cregar would want to know all she could tell.
Well, she had an idea there. She started to think it out as she
cleaned cages, fed and watered their occupants. What she had in
mind just might work. It would delay an attack on Storm's beasts
if some of the things Logan had told her were
true. She smiled savagely to
herself. It would take careful handling. She'd have to make
Dedran think it was his idea. But if she said just the right
things the circus boss could take the bait. Cregar was under
orders and why should he know any more about Arzor than the
circus boss knew? She'd accessed the information available in the
ship's library often enough to know all the library had about
Arzor. Laris had listened to Logan
as he talked about the natives of Arzor. He'd told her old
stories, native customs. And something of the vast and often
savage desert lands in which the wild Nitra clans lived. The ship
records had said almost nothing about Arzor, save to note that
the natives were mostly friendly. The men would accept
that. Eyes opened behind her own.
*Be cautious, sister-one. Too little said is better than too
much.* *Come with me and listen
when he calls me then. Maybe you can think of something to say.*
Prauo was not a talker without cause but his advice was good once
he did. *I will do that.* The intercom on the hold
wall began to whistle her name. Dedran wanted to speak to her.
She obeyed, trotting from the hold with deliberate haste. Let him
also believe that she was eager to be cooperative in the face of
his threats. Dedran eyed her prompt
arrival with approval. Bondservants. They all needed a touch of
the whip occasionally. The girl was more valuable to him than she
knew but if she did not bend to his designs, then he'd have to
break her. He addressed the small
figure as she stood before him submissively. "Sit down." She
obeyed. "Now, I've listened to your talk with this Logan. So he's
going to High Peaks ranch. Tell me about it." Laris talked, making the
difficulties sound just a bit greater than they were. "So they send few copters up
there," she informed him. "The winds as they come from the peaks
are dangerous. Logan will have coptered to the lower reaches of
their land, then ridden the rest of the way." She watched as he
absorbed that then shifted to prattle about the
animals. "And they have coyotes.
They're so cute, and smart—why once I saw them..." She
recounted a hunting story making much of the animal's
intelligence. "They're a mated breeding pair too. It's a pity,
but they won't be at the Peaks. Storm's wife took them to some
native camp to hunt again. But you want the others, not a pair of
coyotes." "Don't tell me what I want,"
Dedran said absently. Laris kept her face bland and submissive.
Had he taken the bait? He looked at her. "Tell me about this
Tani. Is she a trained beast master?" He had! She shook her head.
"No, Storm said once she has the abilities. But the war ended too
soon. She was never even in the services. Her aunt and uncle are
scientists and she worked with them. Mostly washing bottles and
lab equipment I think." She mustn't make him think Tani worth
taking or killing. "She's only about nineteen I think." A lie but
Dedran might not know, she thought. Tani didn't look older and
he'd only seen her briefly a couple of times. Dedran equated age
with wisdom, youth with stupidity. Let him see Tani as no
threat. Dedran scowled thoughtfully.
"Tell me about this girl and the coyotes." A mind voice came, *Quickly,
protest their importance.* Laris wrinkled her forehead.
"But she's not even trained. And if you take one of the coyotes
it would pine away like some of the other animals you've brought
in." "You said she has the
abilities, and so do her animals, yes?" "Well, so Storm said. But
he's her husband. He could have been just, well, bragging about
it." *Well done,
sister-without-fur. Gently, not too firm.* "I don't know. Anyway, Tani
and her team are over on the fringe of the desert. It'd take
longer to get to them." She allowed her face to frown a little.
"Of course Storm did say it was easy to get there in a copter.
There isn't the same wind gust problem as they have at High
Peaks..." She allowed her voice to trail away. Dedran nodded once in
decision. "I'll want you to speak to Cregar tomorrow. Tell him
all you know about this girl and the coyotes. I presume you have
some idea of where the natives she's visiting are
camped." Laris agreed. Logan had
talked about the Djimbut clan and their lands enough to allow her
to give some direction to Cregar's search. "Then get out and check that
wolf. Is the stupid brute going to survive or are we talking
samples from another dead beast?" Laris mumbled that the
latter was probable and fled. To her distress that information
was almost certainly true since the will to live was broken in
the large gray animal. It lay there refusing to eat or drink. She
could provide nourishment intravenously but when she'd tried that
before, the wolf had roused as soon as she left just enough to
rip the tube free each time. She was using stimulants but they
had worked with less and less effect. She had kept it alive for
several days but she was losing the battle and knew
it. Inside herself she raged at
the necessity of torturing the animal. But if she didn't Dedran
would see that someone else did who would be less kind. She
counted. Five days since liftoff. If the wolf died now Dedran
wouldn't blame her. She'd kept it alive long enough to show she
was trying. She removed the tube, cut off the trickle of
stimulant, then stroked the harsh pelt. She bent over and
whispered softly into one furred ear. "Go free, friend. Run free.
I give you leave to go." The lungs heaved up,
hesitated, and then the breath went out slowly. The body seemed
to flatten. She waited a few minutes to be sure before taking
with a steady hand the samples Dedran would require. She placed
those in the chiller, labeled them, added a warning to the lid,
and went to find the circus boss. "The wolf died. It tore out
the tubes again while I was with you. I've taken the samples.
They're safely in the chiller. Three sets." He hurled a paperweight at
the wall. "I had it! It wasn't even hurt. Damned beasts, damned
beast masters." His eyes suddenly looked frightened as his voice
dropped to a hoarse whisper. "I have to get one that stays alive.
Maybe a beast would stay alive if its mate was with it." He
turned on Laris. "Get out!" She edged to the door as he slumped
in his seat. Her ears caught his mutter as she slid the door
shut. "Nhara will kill me if I
fail." Nhara? Laris drove the name
deep into her mind. It sounded like an inner systems name. She
wondered if Nhara might well be Dedran's mysterious patron and
backer. She'd long since deduced that Dedran owned only a small
percentage of the circus. It was a decoy, used as a screen, as
through it moved people and animals which would have been noticed
as illegal in some way without it. Cregar came to talk about
Tani and the coyotes just before the Lereyne landing. He listened
to all Laris could say. Dedran was there as well and the men
talked over the girl's head. "Coyotes are smart even
without genetic enhancement." That was Cregar. "So why did the beast master
HQ switch mostly to wolves?" "I'm not certain. I think
they may have found coyotes more independent. Wolves are pack
animals." Dedran was onto that. "So
coyotes are less likely to suffer separation trauma, and with the
girl not having been trained at all they may be less strongly
bonded." He smiled nastily. "Think of it, Cregar. You could even
end up with them bonded to you." He turned to Laris. "You say the
girl went to this native camp alone? None of her family are with
her?" "She went alone but," Laris
said, choosing her words carefully, "there's nothing to say one
of the family won't go after her. Although I did get the
impression she was to stay there alone several weeks. But I could
be wrong." That should cover her. If anything happened then she
could quote her own words. She hadn't been sure and had said
so. Dedran discounted her
warnings as she'd expected. He had fastened onto this idea of a
young harmless girl unable to protect two enhanced beasts. Two
animals bonded to each other as a mated pair. He discounted the
natives too. Dedran came originally from a long-settled inner
planet. Any native race there had died out long before humanity
lifted its face to the stars. He despised native races as
primitive. He'd never been called on to live as they did and had
no idea of how much intelligence and ingenuity—and ferocity—such a life could take. They were only a step up
from the animals they used, he thought. Cregar could copter in,
sneak up after dark, stun as many as was necessary, and escape
with the stunned coyotes. He could pick up assistance from local
criminals as always. Make sure they had no ID. Hire the copter
under a false name. And anyway, one thing he had found about
Arzor: The native lands were theirs by treaty. The natives had no
copters and by government decree no one over-flew tribal lands.
It would take them days to get a message out about his raid. By
then Cregar would be long gone. He waved the girl to the
door and gave Cregar his orders. "I want both coyotes undamaged.
Stun them. Try not to kill any of the natives or the girl either.
The Quade boy was talking to Laris in one of the bugged rooms.
Too many people are beginning to put two and two together and
they're getting a conspiracy against beast masters as their
answer. Take as many men as you need and stun the whole camp if
you have to. Set their horses free, and stun everyone again
before you leave. It should give you enough of a head
start." "Uh-huh. Baris and Ideena
were heading here the last I heard of them." He gave a hard grin.
"I had a contact of mine keep a watch on what they were doing.
You know, Dedran, I could use that scout ship of theirs. If I
offer them the right to loot the camp before we get out they'd
take me in and off Arzor again without declaring a passenger. If
Arzoran security start looking for anyone it would be for
them." "And if they get themselves
killed you could fake voice-prints and lift off with a sweet ship
to add to our outfit. They aren't guild." Dedran agreed slowly.
"I like it. Talk to them. Offer them anything but let them set
the price." His eyes met those of the man opposite him. "And if
the natives don't kill them, maybe they still won't make it
back." "I think that's possible.
I'll look for them as soon as we land." He stood and left the
cabin. A man couldn't choose the ones he worked with. A pity. But
the money was good and the chance of beasts again sounded even
better. But he'd see to it that his hirelings didn't harm the
Tani girl. She wasn't a real beast master. Not one of those who'd
stood by and let him be dumped like rubbish. He'd allow her to
live. Since she wasn't trained the loss of her team wouldn't be
so bad anyhow. He went to his cabin, laid down, and dreamed of
days long past when one was many and all were one. He was near the cages the
next day, gazing at the beasts as Laris scurried to and fro in
her work. He noticed her struggling to move a larger box of
supplies from the top of several others, and moved forward just
as the box began to tilt dangerously downward. It had been
heavier than Laris expected as it slid toward her. Cregar jumped
forward, realizing if it fell on the child she could be injured.
His hands closed on the box's handles and he caught it before
lowering it down safely with her help. He glanced at
her. "Be careful, if you are hurt
Dedran won't be pleased." Her mouth twisted into a wry
smile. "I know." He turned to leave and without thinking she
spoke. It was the old custom of the camps binding her to a fair
exchange. The man had maybe saved her from injury, a favor of the
same kind was owed. "Cregar?" He turned to
listen. "Don't discount the natives on Arzor. Logan told me
they're warriors. A clan can fight like a tigerbat swarm." He
said nothing, only nodded in reply before he left again, but
Laris was satisfied he'd understood her warning. They touched down on Lereyne
to find that Dedran's forerunners had whipped up crowd enthusiasm
to almost a frenzy. Cregar faded into the crowd seething on the
port periphery, watching the circus set up on the back lot. He
found Baris drifting quietly along, eyes flicking from side to
side. Cregar could have taken the idiot right there. But he
wanted to use the pair as long as possible. And it would fire the
other man's touchy pride. Cregar half turned away and
waited. Crats, but the man was clumsy. He'd sensed him sneaking
up minutes before he closed in to hand range. He encouraged his
body to flinch when the hand tapped him lightly on the shoulder.
Turning, he had time to see the gratified look in Baris's eyes.
The man had been a skulker, a scavenger, and a hanger-on during
the war and in some ways he'd never gotten over not being a real
fighter. Now it delighted him that
he'd successfully surprised one who'd not only been a warrior,
but one of the elite. Cregar allowed him his moment of triumph
before beginning negotiations. Ideena was more
suspicious. "What's in this for
you?" She was sniffing at the
bait. Now to set the hook. "We'll both do well," Cregar told her
calmly. "For us, I get the beasts Dedran wants. You'll be
transporting me and them free. I'll split the cost of those we
hire. For you, Dedran had his little snooper staying with the
family there for weeks. She says that the Storm woman is off
visiting with a native clan." He leaned forward and splayed a set
of photos across the table. "Ever seen something like
this?" Ideena gaped. "Cat's-eye
gems." She stared at him, her tongue flicking out to lick her
lips. "Where?" He smiled. He had her now.
"Where'd you think? Arzor, where I want to go. That's the world
which produces them. The Thunder-talkers there wear sets like
this. Thunder-talkers are their witch doctors and they always
wear the most valuable green gems as their symbols. Some of the
wealthier clan people would have lesser jewels. The ones in gold
or red maybe. Those photos are from the early days. Now the
planet holds a native treaty in place. They don't go onto native
lands, they can't hunt there or even fly-over without specific
clan permission." He added one further comment, his voice
stressing the words slowly. "And the clans have only
bows and arrows. They ride horses. No guns, no copters, no
nothing." Ideena's eyes were
glittering. "And any clan would have a
Thunder-talker." "And any Thunder-talker
would have a set of gems like these, maybe better," he
confirmed. She exchanged looks with
Baris. "We're in. But we get to check the whole clan if there's
time." "There should be. If there
isn't we can just stun them again." He watched her. Ideena looked
at Baris who signaled acceptance. "All right," she said.
"We're definitely in. But any tricks, Cregar, and Baris'll feed
you to those damn beasts you're snatching." "I'm interested in the
animals, and getting in and out with my hide and no peacekeepers
on my tail. That's all. But while you're giving out warnings take
one for yourself." He fixed her with his eyes until she nodded.
"Good. When can you lift off?" Ideena consulted Baris in a
low mutter as they walked to the ramp. Baris seemed to be
protesting. She overrode that and turned to Cregar. "Tomorrow
morning at the earliest. We need supplies, and Baris has
something he wants to do." Cregar would have bet on it.
At the very least Baris would be planning some way to make sure
they weren't tricked. Considering the man, it wouldn't be
anything too subtle though. And since neither of this precious
pair would want anyone knowing their business, they'd be unlikely
to be planning the timeworn "leaving an envelope with someone to
be opened" routine. There was always a chance that trick would go
wrong, and the envelope used to convict them of
something. He waved graciously.
"Tomorrow morning then. And I'll contribute to supplies. That's
fair." He handed over a hundred-credit note, contriving to brush
against Baris's sleeve as he did so. The tiny bug should stay
there long enough. He'd planted two larger bugs already. One
under the table here, and another by their ship's ramp. Ideena
would expect that. She'd look, find them, and be satisfied. But
they were meant to be found. Now he flicked three more from his
fingertips when neither quarry was watching. One bounced off and was
lost. The other two clung to Ideena's clothing near the hem. Not
an ideal spot but they had good amplification. He should be able
to hear what this pair said. He left the duo with protestations
of comradeship and hurried to a secluded place behind a shed.
Then he thrust the receiver into his ear hastily. Baris was
complaining. "Why can't we just murder
the creep once we lift off? We can dump his body into the sun and
keep going." Ideena's voice would have
etched steel. "Baris, you idiot. If we do that how are we going
to find out where this clan is?" "Who says we need that
particular clan?" "I do. If we get picked up
for any reason before we're clear, well, we're just innocent
traders accepting a hired collection job. We had no idea what the
man was doing. When we found out, we were out over the desert in
a copter filled with his men. You get us new IDs in some unlisted
name before we lift. If they run us they find nothing. If they
run Cregar they get..." It was clear that a great
light was dawning on Baris. "Oh, I see. That's clever of you,
Ideena. They'll get his record and then they'll believe
us." "Riiight," Ideena drawled.
"So we dump him after we score and get clear. He thinks we're
going in without listing him as a passenger, but we do more, we
list him as having hired us. If nothing does go wrong Dedran will
likely pay well to have these animals back even if Cregar doesn't
come with them. Just see to it that Cregar can't steal the ship
and we'll make out like pirates." "What do you mean 'like
pirates'? We are pirates." There was a lot of chuckling
and Cregar removed the receiver. He took a small flat object from
his belt, set several buttons, hooked it back, and strolled into
the port crowds again. He'd let the recorder pick up anything
else they said for a while, and he'd play it back every few
hours. But Baris and Ideena would be busy most of the day. It
would be later when they had their errands out of the way that
what they said might have some bearing on him again. He reported back to Dedran.
"They're not intending to do anything until we leave Arzor. But I
need a clean ID for myself and a set of theirs with their true
identities. I'll plant theirs somewhere half smart. If we get
picked up by any authorities I'll be clean and it'll be that pair
who'll have to be answering questions." He smirked. "There's times
when I can hardly keep track of who's double-crossing who in this
game. Hang on a moment." He activated the recorder and listened.
"Nothing, just supplier trading. Listen, we'll be using their
ship to get to Arzor and do the grab on the animals. One thing
Baris and Ideena will do is try to fix their ship so I can't lift
off on my own without them. Any ideas how they might be able to
do that?" Dedran considered. "Nothing
you shouldn't be able to counter if you drop them at some stage
and can pick over them and their gear for any lockchip. They'd
probably use one of those to freeze their ship's controls. But if
you have to make a run for it and lose them..." He thought. "Take
an all-purpose memorychip. If they take a chip out of the
navigationcomp the ship won't lift. Or if they run a null program
to keep the programming wiped. Put a memorychip in and it
bypasses the null program or the lack of a proper
chip." Cregar nodded. "Sounds okay.
But keep thinking. I'll see you before I lift. If I don't come
back neither do your animals." He didn't have to mention that if
the authorities collected him because Baris and Ideena had been
able to dump Cregar first, then if Cregar was still alive he'd
have no reason not to talk to the Arzoran authorities and save
his own skin. If he gave them someone higher up the chain they'd
give him immunity and a new ID. He'd talk selectively of course.
Enough to have them out looking for Dedran the
mastermind. Not enough to encourage a
guild contract. But that would still leave Dedran doing several
lifetimes—depending on the planet which
caught him and for what. Some had the death penalty for many of
Dedran's activities. And Dedran had no one farther up the chain
he could talk about. Too many of those were heavy into the guild,
who'd forcibly resent it. Not that Cregar had to say any of this,
he didn't have to, it was what Dedran would do if he was the one
caught first. His smile was bitter—what a life. Turn in your
companion before he turned you in. Trust no one, make no friends,
never stay long in any place. How had he come to this? Cregar spent much of the day
on the move, but he sat in to watch the afternoon show. It went
well and the crowd stood to applaud at the end. Judging by the
number of people turned away at the door, Dedran would be able to
stay here for weeks without suspicion. He checked out the
recorder as he checked back with the circus boss. Neither had any
more worth hearing. Cregar headed toward the ramp, then
halted. There was one other thing
which bothered him. But there wasn't much he could do about it.
He turned away and stood looking indecisively into the animal
hold. At the far side he could see the girl grooming a tigerbat.
They'd be setting up for the evening show soon. Cregar cursed in
a soft, tired voice. He was a fool. But he trusted Laris more
than he did any other person, and she'd warned him. He'd
understood her earlier comment to him about the natives, they
weren't quite as passive as the ship's library made them out to
be. With that warning in mind he'd added a precaution or two for
his trip into the clan lands. Dedran had talked recently
about his plans for the child. Here on Lereyne they had the
arenas as they had on several other worlds. In them, beasts
fought for their lives. On Lereyne the sport was frowned upon
socially although it was not illegal. However, the nonacceptance
meant that it was very difficult to acquire good beast trainers.
Dedran would like to sell Laris for that purpose, unless her bond
expired before he could do so, or the child found enough credit
to escape. And if she thought what he would tell her now was only
about money—the child was as honest as she
could be with Dedran as bond-master. He caught her eye and
signaled her to come to him in silence. She obeyed, then stood
listening as he spoke in the camp slang he'd learned in low
ports, using a very soft, carefully blurred voice. None could
lip-read that or even pick it up understandably with a wall bug
or directional mike. "If I don't come back, I
gotta a stash 'a credits. Want you ter have them. They behind a
panel, room next t' mine." He gave swift directions and waited to
see she understood. "Why'n me?" "If 'n I don't need them 'ny
more what matter. Take 'em and get out. Swear oath, no touchin'
'til it's sure I'm gone. Then use 'em to leave. Oke?" She met his eyes firmly.
"Swear oath," the same carefully blurred voice repeated. She put
out a shy hand and brushed her fingertip over his arm. "You'm
take care 'n thanks." She was gone, back to her tigerbat grooming
and Cregar was left shaking a little. He forced calm and left
without meeting Dedran. He found himself wondering, if he'd
stayed in the service, if he'd married, if he'd had a daughter,
would she have been like that one? He hoped so. Then he scoffed
at himself. He was getting soft in his old age. Laris was just
another camp brat, but—she was better than most. The
girl had warned him, risking the circus boss's anger if he'd
heard that, and Cregar had heard her tell Dedran earlier that
Cregar was a fine trainer. Something inside of him was warm
remembering her words. Let the kid get out if she had the chance;
if he went down on this trip his credits would be no use to him
anyway. He turned into the street
where the shop should have his requirements, his thoughts
returning to the circus. If Laris stayed there Dedran would fake
an open bond and sell the child to be a beast trainer for one of
the arenas. She would fight that—and her new owners—and be broken, something he didn't
wish to happen. He put it all out of his mind as he entered the
store and settled to bargain for one of the all-purpose
shipchips. They came high and he wasn't wasting
credit. Fortunately he didn't have
to. Lereyne was a fishing planet with a number of
ports—and all the shops which catered to
them. On the huge inland sea there were canneries, fish-drying
factories, and a host of fishing boats, along with the people who
worked on the boats and in the factories. The volume of foreign
cargo ships which ported on Lereyne not only made it an excellent
place to stop for a circus, it also made it a good place to buy
small, normally high-cost, portable items. Cregar bought an
all-purpose secondhand shipchip for a price which made his smile
stay in place all the time he searched for Baris. Chapter Eight Cregar found Baris. The man
was gambling again but with skill. From what the ex-beast master
knew, Baris often supplemented his and Ideena's income with some
clever cheating but only on planets not sophisticated enough to
have checking programs in place. The penalties for being caught
cheating ranged from forced bond to death depending on the world
and its laws. Nor would Baris bother with
the inner worlds, where monetary systems were mainly on personal
or general memorychips. They depended on IDs which were almost
impossible to forge, and their gambling payouts were transferrals
from one chip to another. Baris wouldn't gamble on such worlds;
they gave nothing portable and anonymous. Computer winnings on
such worlds could be too easily tracked from planet to planet. He
signaled Baris who raked in a stack of credits and
nodded. "Thank you, friends. I must
go now as I warned you." He flicked a couple of credits across to
the dealer. "Drinks on me." He bowed to the gamblers around the
table. "I salute you. It's as well I'm leaving before fortune
frowns and I lose my very boots." Cregar noted the grins. So,
Baris had been cheating a bunch of rich amateurs. A good touch.
He'd warned them he'd have to leave when a friend showed up. Paid
for drinks, and left them with a compliment. By their looks, they
had no suspicion they'd been done. They thought of Baris as a
nice man and merely a good gambler with luck on his shoulder.
Cregar made a mental note of that. Baris was a better
psychologist than he'd thought. Judging by the stack of credits
he'd scooped up he'd sheared this bunch and left them liking
it. Baris joined him. "Nice
people, terrible gamblers." His smile was satisfied. "Ideena will
be pleased. I made back everything we spent on supplies
earlier." Cregar hid a wince. "How
long were you at the table?" "Five hours. Come on, Ideena
wants us back at the ship. She plans to lift off as soon as we
get clearance." Obediently Cregar hurried.
Five hours, he was thinking as he trotted along. Baris must have
tossed in the occasional hand and built up a slow but steady
trickle of hands won. No huge pots. No obvious runs of too-good
fortune. Just a quiet bleeding of credits across the table in
Baris's direction. He'd have used sleight of hand to drop credits
into his pockets. No buildup of those on the table. With them out
of sight and Baris not seen pocketing them either, there'd have
been nothing to remind the others that they kept
losing. Cregar wasn't a gambler
himself. Most professionals in that field had a touch of ESP. His
own abilities didn't lean in that direction, but he knew how it
was done. It was one of the first things they taught beast
masters, so they didn't get caught in any traps. He'd survived
long enough to learn that as well as other things. He didn't
realize his lips had peeled back in a snarl. They'd taught him,
shown him heaven—then torn it away from him,
leaving him empty and bleeding for the rest of his life. They
would pay. At the ship Ideena was
waiting. "What kept you?" Her tone softened when Baris grinned
and began turning credits from his pockets. "Well done. No
trouble?" He snorted. "Bunch of
amateurs. Rich kids wanting to show they knew what was what. I
trimmed them good an' they never knew a thing. They'll still be
down there drinking the credits I left and saying what a nice guy
I was." Ideena was counting the
notes and coins. "This'll cover what I spent for supplies.
Nothing like a free trip." She eyed Cregar. "But there's still
fuel. You'd better make this worthwhile, Circus Man. Get to your
cabin and strap down. I've already got clearance. We lift in a
few minutes." Cregar nodded and left. He
opened doors. The first two cabins clearly belonged to Baris and
Ideena. The next was empty. He dropped his bag into a chest
bolted to the floor, rolled onto the bunk, and fastened the
shockweb harness. Just a couple of minutes later the small ship
shivered and leapt skyward. Cregar was mulling over something
Ideena had given away. She had to have known Baris had met him
and that they were on their way to the ship. Without knowing that, she'd
hardly have asked for liftoff clearance. This was an active port.
It was the clearing area for the trade of several planets. Ships
large and small came and went busily. If Ideena had asked for
clearance and then aborted they'd have dumped her to the back of
the queue. Therefore she'd known they were on their way. Which
meant she and Baris had some way of keeping in contact without
the man making it obvious. He'd better find out what
that was. It could be inconvenient at the least to have them
exchanging information if he wanted them isolated. At the most it
could be lethal. The shivering quietened as the power curve
leveled off. Gravity dropped to what felt like a quarter
of standard and Cregar flicked the shockweb harness free again.
He stood and wandered from the cabin. Time for a quick snoop now
under the guise of finding his way about. He had time for that and
more over the time it took to make Arzor. Baris tried to entice
him into gambling and failed. Ideena tried her wiles and he
allowed it to appear she had succeeded. Not that she'd take it
further than sweet smiles. Baris wouldn't like it. But he
allowed it to seem that he was softening toward her, perhaps that
he was beginning to even trust her a little. He wondered who was
fooling who. But you had to play the game. They landed on Arzor. Hiring
a copter and a few career criminals was easy. Baris had the
transactions completed by evening. They'd fly out early the next
morning. Cregar went to his cabin for a good night's sleep.
Judging by the sounds, Baris and Ideena had sought her cabin for
a similarly early night, although not to sleep. That was another
interesting point. Courting danger clearly excited them. His
smile was grim as he made his own preparations. If they tried
anything he'd be ready for it and the danger would be more than
they were expecting. The copter was already there
by the time they had risen and eaten a light meal the next
morning. The hired quartet of scruffy, dangerous-looking port
scum were lounging about beside it. Baris was a qualified pilot,
but at a pinch Cregar could get the copter up if he had to. He
took the seat behind Baris and unobtrusively watched as the big
man handled the controls. The copter circled, drifted
in as quietly as possible from an unexpected direction, and
finally settled in to land in the rough country past the clan
camp. They'd wait until dark then move in. Both Baris and Ideena
had slipped dark lenses into their eyes. They would be able to
see well enough. The lenses Cregar used were state-of-the-art. He
could not only see everything as if it were day, he could also
pick up heat auras. He'd know if living things were in hiding
behind brush or behind anything else which allowed a heat
signature to seep past. He omitted to mention that.
Let them believe his lenses were of the usual kind. If things
went wrong he wasn't about to risk more than he had to. The sun
curved slowly across the lavender sky. The copter's seven
occupants dozed, drank, and ate. Cregar eyed the hired quartet
from under half-closed eyelids. An unsavory bunch. Ten-to-one if
Ideena found her gems in any quantity there'd be an attempt to
dump her, Baris, and Cregar. Probably not until the men had been
paid though. If they waited until they were back at the ship they
could maybe loot the ship too. He lay back, allowing
himself to fall into a half sleep. He could smell the desert from
here where the small breeze lifted to higher land. It was a good
smell. Clean, dry, with a hint of the growing brush. That soft
smoky scent which would have said falwood in bloom to an Azoran.
In the distance a grass hen squawked angrily. Cregar squinted at
his watch. He'd keep an eye on their so-called comrades in crime.
He didn't think they'd try anything. Not yet. They wouldn't move
until there was loot to take. Right now he'd be safe
enough. When he woke completely the
sun was almost down. It would take them a couple of hours to walk
the distance to the clan camp. Best they had a meal now, then
started. Ideena was of the same mind. Once they'd begun the march
she ranged up alongside Cregar and her voice came in a low tone
none but he could hear. "I don't trust these men."
That was the pot calling the kettle black, Cregar thought. He
cocked an eyebrow in invitation for her to continue and she did,
dropping her voice still lower. "I've a spare gun tucked in the
clump of weeds by the ramp. If anything happens, pretend to fall
down there." "What sort of gun? How
effective will it be?" He wanted to know how far she'd
go. "Stunner but it's blast-bolt
activated." That told him. She'd go all the way. Activating a
stunner with a blast-bolt had been done before, but it was so
frowned on that anyone caught doing it would go to rehab
automatically. Of course, if it was his life, then he'd risk the
illegality first and worry about rehab later. It wasn't likely
they'd catch him anyhow. Or care greatly about the death of any
of this lot. But it told him more than he'd known about this
precious pair. He'd always thought they were small-time. They
might still be the jackals he'd believed. If they were prepared
to go that far though, they were rabid ones. He spoke
quietly. "What about your own
stunners here?" "They're
straight." That was better—if it was the truth but he
couldn't be sure of that until they used their weapons. He
plodded on in silence considering all he'd learned of them thus
far. He couldn't trust any of the six people with him and he
didn't like that. He'd have liked things even less if he'd known
what lay ahead. Tani had returned to the
clan. Storm had accepted that when, after ten days, there'd been
no sign of trouble. But it was the time between the two major
seasons on Arzor, the big wet and the big dry. She enjoyed that
pleasantly mild in-between season and had gone back to hunt with
her friends another few days. They'd taken two yearling merin
deer and a number of the fat grass hens. It was an hour short of
dusk. They'd done well enough, now they'd head for the camp to be
back before dark. Jumps High, the first clan
friend she had made the year before, had been about to pack the
meat onto their horses when Ferarre's ears pricked. He whined.
Linking, Tani caught the up and down beat of a muffled copter.
She hissed and dropped flat. Jumps High copied that as did the
other four natives. He half turned from his
sprawl to hand-sign to her. "Danger, where, what?" "Ferarre hears a copter.
That's not good." "How so?" "It didn't head for the
camp, instead it's gone in a half circle around and landed
beyond. It hasn't lifted off again. You know the law, no copter
is allowed over clan lands. I think those who fly it may be
enemies." It had to be that. Or some idiot citizen with more
money than sense but the rangers would have known and stopped it.
The treaty was very firm on over-flights. If it had been Storm or one
of the rangers with an emergency he'd have flown straight to the
camp. The Nitra weren't fools. They would have understood if it
was truly needful. But the copter had landed in cover; not near
the camp. She felt there was danger and these were her friends,
she would not have them hurt because she did not make her warning
clear. Jumps High was signing.
"Does the copter rise again?" "No." The coyote's ears
could hear no sound. The engines were still off. That probably
meant it would stay where it was for a while. She stood, turning,
listening. Then her hands rose. "The engine sounds came from that
way." Her friends clustered around
their mounts, swiftly field dressing the dead deer then loading
the kill. Jumps High considered. "How far are the copter sounds
from here, and how far from our camp?" "From here maybe a half-hour
ride. From camp they may be one hour's ride." And that was what
had given the copter away. They'd circled in from the far side of
the outer lands. It was their ill fortune that Tani and her
friends had been hunting in that direction. Worse luck that
Ferarre and Minou could hear even a copter with a muffled engine
at that distance. Had it not been for the coyotes, even then the
copter would not have been noticed. She smiled to herself.
They'd all been under cover cleaning the game when the copter
circled. If it had heat-sensing gear the occupants hadn't been
reading it at the time. And neither Tani, the Nitra, nor their
animals had been out in the open to be seen by any glancing out
of the clearplas bubble. A copter's heat-sensing gear differed.
It was possible theirs was of the basic kind which read only that
there was a sort of blotch of heat in a certain position. Not the
shape of that source. In which case with everyone in cover they
could have seen the sources and still mistakenly assumed them to
be animals, sheltering from the hotter sun of
afternoon. The deer and grass hens
safely loaded, Jumps High was signaling to Tani again, using her
native name. "We will go now, Sunrise. Once we are back in camp I
will speak to the Thunder-talker of this. She will pray and ask
the powers of the Thunder what is the danger to us. Then we can
make plans. For now, let us ride quickly for the
camp." His mount leapt away and
Tani swung into her saddle. Destiny, the silver part-duocorn
filly she rode, followed Jumps High's mount eagerly. Behind them
in a scattered group came their friends. The coyotes ranged
ahead. Tani wondered if she should mind-link with Mandy. The big
paraowl could fly out and look over the area where the copter had
landed. But if anyone who knew Arzor saw her they'd know she
didn't belong here. It could warn the enemy if that's what they
were. Best to take no chances. Not yet. One thing the possible enemy
should not know. Tani smiled, a slow hard grin. She was the only
human clan-friend among the dozen clans of the Nitra. Because of
her position Kelson of the rangers had granted her a miniature
comcaller. When she visited the Djimbut clan it came with her by
clan permission. Using it she could report any Nitra problems,
anything likely to make trouble between native and settler. There
was a built-in scramble as well; that way if the news was bad no
one listening in would raise a premature alarm. She nudged
Destiny and the filly sped up to canter lightly beside the mount
of Jumps High. "When we come to the camp
I'll speak to Kelson. Ask why a copter breaks the
treaty." "That is good," was the
brief reply. Tani rode on, her mind busy.
She had to know what to say to the ranger head. She sorted her
impressions, ordered them by importance, then rode patiently. As
soon as they arrived at the camp she slowed but continued through
toward the tent of the clan medicine woman. Once there she
dismounted, signing swiftly as her friend stepped from the tent
entrance to greet her. "There may be trouble, I
must speak to Kelson. Listen to what I say." She switched on the
comcaller and reached Kelson almost at once. As she spoke into
the transmitter panel her hands flew, repeating in sign-talk for
the benefit of those clan members who did not understand the
settler language what she was saying to the ranger
head. "Kelson. Listen. While I was
hunting to the north of the clan camp Ferarre heard a copter. It
landed about an hour's ride from the camp and hadn't taken off
again after an hour or so. I don't like the way the engines are
muffled and it circled supposedly out of our hearing before
setting down. Could it be a legitimate flight?" There was a gasp,
then the sound of a computer beeping. After several minutes the
ranger's voice came back, loud and angry. "No, it is not. There's no
record of any request. Our two copters are both out in other
directions and I've just checked with port. No copter filed any
flight plan even remotely in your direction." "You're sure? Then what do
we do?" "Hang on. I'm checking." He
came back after several minutes. "I don't like this, Tani. The
only copter it could be is one belonging to an outfit I don't
trust very far. The copter has muffled engines and the pilot
filed a flight plan toward the desert fringe on a sight-seeing
trip with tourists. My contact at the port says seven people
boarded. He knows two of them from the port here as minor but
unsavory criminals." He paused. "It should be just about dark
where you are by now." "It is," Tani informed
him. "I can't get our copters
back until morning. Tell the clan these people have no rights. If
the warriors protect the clan in any way they must, then they are
within our laws as well as their own." He paused again then spoke
with heavy significance. "In any way. But do your best to see
those ways don't include the tourists, who may be an innocent
cover." "And if they
aren't?" "Then that applies to them
as well." Her flying fingers had been
keeping up with the conversation as Tani and Kelson spoke. From
the growing Nitra circle about her there came soft hisses of
satisfaction. If their actions were within settler law as well as
their own, that meant that stunners taken were legitimate loot.
They could be kept as could anything else taken from the
attackers. The Nitra would have no use for the copter, but if
they took that they could exchange its price for clan wealth in
horses. Tani could guess at their reaction to that
idea. "I think you've said the
right thing, Kelson." "Tell them live tourists can
be fined and the fine given to the clan as well, but only if the
tourists are in one piece," he suggested. "I'll do that. But you see
what you can find out about them. I'll switch the com alarm off.
Better our possible enemy doesn't know we have one. It'll flicker
the lights if you call. The Thunder-talker's interpreter will
stay with it; he's crippled so he isn't a warrior. If there's no
attack going on when you call he can whistle me in to answer.
Tani out." She settled in to discuss
tactics. The coyotes would eat and drink now then slip into the
night. They'd show to heat sensors but as smaller blotches only,
not as what they were. With fortune the enemy would assume them
to be native animals disturbed by the movement. Jumps High had
called in the camp's younger warriors as well. Thrown out in a
screen, they would let the attackers through then close in
behind. The experienced fighters would be ready, defending the
camp and filling in the other half of a surrounding circle of
death. The horse herd was loosed to wander about. The more heat
blotches the better. The Nitra medicine woman was
signing, "What weapons will they have?" "They'll have stunners for
sure, those are legal and everyone has them. If they really mean
this as an attack they could have pulse rifles." She grinned
again as the listening warriors hissed in delight. They knew
weaponry. A pulse rifle was normally beyond their ability to buy,
but if the enemy brought the rifle here it was legitimate loot.
Her hands flashed signs as she continued. "They may have special
things for their eyes. Lenses that allow them to see in the night
as if it was the day." The Nitra medicine woman
gave a bark of amusement. "Hough! Djimbut are warriors. We can
fight in dark or light, do they think we do not know our own
lands? These enemies are fools if they think that way. Already we
know they are here while they do not know we know. Kelson says
their landing is not lawful. They are our prey and their property
shall be ours." Tani signed swiftly then. She must make them
understand that it would be bad if the possibly innocent tourists
died. The Thunder-drummer nodded,
the human gesture of agreement the Arzoran natives had learned
from the settlers. "We understand. It is simple, those without
guns we do not harm, those with guns we shall kill. If your
tourists fight against us, they too shall die." It was a reasonable
attitude, Tani thought, and Kelson could hardly expect the clan
warriors to let themselves be shot, whether the shooter was a
panicked tourist or not. She glanced from the tent entrance. By
now it was about an hour after full dark. The clans tended to
sleep about the second hour unless some celebration was
occurring. Those in the copter would likely know that. She turned
to the com. "Kelson?" "Kelson
listening." "I think if they come it'll
be in about an hour. The clan's agreed not to hurt the tourists
unless they're using weapons too. Then all bets are off. Did you
find out anything more?" His voice was harsh now.
"Much more! The copter was supposed to be taking three tourists
from an out-systems ship on a two-day tour, with one of the
tourists acting as their pilot. The whole things's an
orchestrated litany of lies. I checked the ship register.
Nothing. But a friend in the patrol pulled a scan of the ship's
registration and it's fake. So are the registered IDs of the two
owners. She can't be sure who they really are but she'll keep
trying to find out. She's found nothing on their so-called
passenger as yet, but birds of a feather flock together." He
heard her soft gasp. "No time to talk that over.
Listen. One of the port people says there were seven in the
copter. That leaves four of ours. Two we knew about as soon as
security saw their recorded faces, and port recording has ID'd
the other two tentatively. All four are criminals. Never been
sufficiently nailed to be forced into rehab but the peacekeepers
say they're sure there's a lot of crime the four have been
responsible for, it just hasn't been proven against them. All
four are nasty pieces of work." Tani had been thinking
quickly, aided by the fast-moving hands of her friend, the
Thunder-talker. "Kelson, would any of the four have ridden herd;
are they used to outlands or are they city folk?" There was a chuckle. "Well
asked. Nope, they're all from the city." Her hands relayed that.
Jumps High twittered a couple of swift orders in his own tongue
and two of the warriors vanished. "I doubt they know much about
local terrain and so far as I know none ride. They can't have
more than stunners and just possibly a selective needier,
either," Kelson assured her. "Certain of
that?" "Fortunately. The port
periphery sensors just put in a new weapons system. It lets us
know if anyone crosses the port boundary carrying heavier weapons
such as pulse rifles or blasters. It doesn't alert the carrier,
just the peacekeepers. They can check them out without the one
who's caught knowing how he came to be tagged. So, there were
only stunners for certain when this bunch lifted from port, but
there was a slightly different reading which could indicate a
needier, one of the small handheld type." She seized on the loophole.
"But they could have landed and picked up other weapons after
leaving." "I don't think so. I timed
your message, added the time they left here, and there's no gap.
At steady speed they'd have just been landing when you heard
them. We do think the copter may have basic heat sensors. Those
would only give them a rather blurred heat signature and the
rough size of the target. I'll get rangers to you at dawn.
Where's Logan?" Tani sighed. "At High Peaks
with Hosteen's team. Logan twisted his wrist and ankle handling a
frawn. Hosteen's riding circuit alone around our ranch. He's got
Baku with him but Surra's still bonding with her new mate, and
Hing has babies." "Then neither man's going to
be available. Okay, Tani. I'll have reinforcements in by dawn.
I'd like some of these idiots to be alive when I get there but if
it's you or them, let it be them. Kelson out." From the darkness outside
the tent came a twittering. The interpreter signed at flowing
speed and fluency. "They come. Jumps High has put up the bodies
of the merin deer on stakes as though they lived. Our scouts
waited in line behind them. Our enemy sees beasts only. They see
in the dark as you have said. They circled the deer so as not to
alarm them." He stopped to listen as the cry of a night bird
came. "The enemy approach. They are close to the horse herd." He
gave a thin-lipped smirk. "They see in the dark, yes.
But still they do not know what they see. Within the herd other
warriors wait and are overlooked." The Thunder-talker nodded.
"Go now, make ready. Sunrise, walk wary." Tani smiled at her. "Very
wary," she agreed. "You also, wise one." She trotted silently
from the tent and went to ground in a small hollow at the far
edge of the camp. The chill ground would shield part of her heat
signature. With only her head showing she'd look like a
rock-rabbit to any heat sensors. The small plump creatures tended
to be about in the early hours of the day or during the night,
their thick fur shielding them from any chill. At the edge of the camp
Baris halted his troops. "The whole place is asleep. Ideena, you
and Cregar go to that big tent, grab all the jewels you can.
Stun-spray every tent you pass. You other four, stunners on wide
spray. Don't worry, we have additional power units. Walk in line
and overlap stun beams in front of us in a semicircle. Make no
noise." They obeyed, setting their
stunners. At his word they started forward, stunners weaving in a
pattern which should cover and overlap every living thing in
front of them in a wide area. Unprepared for this tactic, the
Nitra in the vanguard fell silently in their cover and without
the attackers even knowing of their presence. Moving in skilled
quiet, Ideena and Cregar had circled just outside the stun
influence toward the shaman's tent. They sprayed it
and entered. Ideena took one look and swore viciously in a low
monotonous voice. "No one here but a
Ghesh-damned comcaller." She touched the panel. "Warm, someone
was using it only a few minutes ago. Had to be that girl. Look
through the gear here. If they cleared out fast they may have
left the cat's-eyes behind." She began raking through the
Thunder-talker's possessions ignoring a commotion which flared up
in the distance. "Do you really want to waste
time?" Cregar snapped. "The rangers could be on their way right
now." Ideena glared. "No, they
couldn't. We paid high for the infocheck. Their copters are on
the far side of the area. Even if they were warned just now they
couldn't get here in time. But we may have to get back
into the port a different way. Move it, Cregar. Check that box!"
She gave a subdued cry of pleasure as several bracelets tumbled
out of the folded cloth. She snatched up the jewelry, crooning at
the play of light over green and sparkling white, before wrapping
them again and thrusting them into her pocket. "Worth a whole packet of
credits. Any more?" "No sign." Her mouth turned angrily
down. "You promised a lot more than these." "The wretched woman is
probably wearing the rest. Get out and look for her if you want
them," Cregar growled. It wasn't likely Ideena would find anyone.
But it would get her off his back. She scowled and vanished
through the entrance only to leap back again. "What..." "Don't talk. Get out the
back under the edge. Fast. We've got company." Cregar was no fool. He dived
for the edge of the tent, levered a peg out, and crawled through
the gap. Ideena followed and he turned to re-peg the edge. As he
did so a heavy blow to his back spun him partly around. Ideena
stunned the warrior who had appeared, then looked down at
Cregar. "I thought you were supposed
to be good, Circus Man?" "I'm alive aren't I?" Cregar
shook himself as he rose to his feet glancing at the heavy
fighting spear which had struck him at close range. He owed Laris
one for that, if it hadn't been for her warning he'd have been
wearing lighter body armor under his shirt. The spear would have
gone through the lighter level of that. He took the lead again,
drifting through cover to wait and look back once they were
clear. Two of their men were down, dead he thought. The third had
been struck down and was being tied even as they watched. There
was no sign of the fourth. Baris had hung back cautiously behind
his small command. Seeing that he apparently used no weapon, the
Nitra had ignored him. Baris put two and two
together when he was ignored and fled as if in a blind panic.
Ideena and Cregar came up with him two miles out of the clan
camp. "What do we do
now?" "We get to the copter and
come back." Ideena was white with fury. "I'll show them they
don't beat me so easily." She smiled nastily. "There's a
wide-spray heavy-duty stun on the copter. We brought it aboard in
that chest Baris carried. We'll lift, come in at about fifty
feet, and spray everything for a mile around the camp. Now,
run." They trotted through the
brush and over rough ground until Ideena was stumbling and even
Cregar was wearying. They reached the copter, Baris leaped to the
pilot's seat and waited, speaking softly. "Get your breath first. Give
them time back there to calm down. Did anyone see what happened
to the others? I know some crazy horse killed one. He walked into
it around a bush and it jumped him." "Three dead then," Cregar
said. "They've got the other one and he'll talk if they keep him
alive." "So we clean him. Leave him
with the others. They'll identify them in time but nobody'll know
anything. If we reach the port before daylight we can get to the
ship and clear before they can stop us." Ideena looked mutinous. "Not
without my gems." "Not without my beasts
either," Cregar added. "Okay, okay. Here, take a
drink and then we'll go." Baris passed over a flask and both
drank. The Fever brandy burned a track clear to their livers and
both gasped at the rush of heat. Ideena nodded. "All right. I'm ready. Go,
Go!" Baris lifted the machine
into the air on steady engines, swung it around, and pointed it
south to the camp. The return engagement was about to begin. This
time... Chapter Nine Again the coyotes were the
first to hear the copter returning. It couldn't be Kelson. He'd
said they couldn't get to her until dawn. It had to be the enemy
coming back. Tani stared up at the sky. From the sounds heard by
Minou and Ferarre the machine was coming in barely off the
ground. That was the action of a peacekeeper machine about to
stun-spray. These people must have one of those harmless
pacifiers. But why, what did they want?
She was standing in the entrance of the Thunder-talker's tent
with the older woman. They'd been replacing the tumbled clothing.
Tani stood motionless, her mind suddenly racing. The enemy had
been here. They'd searched among clothing and taken—what? Her hands flashed into
life. "Elder sister! Those who
came, they took what?" "My bracelets." "Those of the
Thunder-talker's power?" "Not so. Friends gifted me
these. But Thunder-talker gems. I mourn their loss." Tani put two and two
together in one intuitive leap. "I think two of our enemies have
banded together. Some come to steal the cat's-eyes. The others
come to take my spirit-friends." She reached for the coyotes and
Mandy the paraowl, urging the paraowl to be ready, the coyotes to
go with the Thunder-talker. Then she turned back to the medicine
woman. "My spirit-friends hear them coming back again. Take off
your gems of power, hide them well outside somewhere. Quick, be
quick!" She called Mandy as the
Thunder-talker swiftly stripped herself of the gemmed belt, the
necklace, and items of her calling. The paraowl arrived just as
the Nitra medicine woman vanished into the dark to hide her
sacred jewelry. Mandy landed lightly and waddled forward as Tani
dropped to one knee to stroke the large bird. "Take this message to Brad,"
she told her friend, impressing it with both voice and mind.
"Brad, I'm with Djimbut clan. We have been attacked and they are
returning. Thieves after cat's-eyes and possibly my team. Tell
Kelson to close the port." By now she could hear the copter
almost at the camp fringe. "Mandy, fly fast. Copter enemy.
Fly!" Mandy was into the air as
the last word left Tani's lips. She lined out and fled for the
home ranch like an arrow. But quick as the paraowl was, the
copter had been quicker. The stun-spray was wide-set and the edge
of it clipped the fleeing bird. Only lightly but enough that she
went into a temporarily blacked-out tumble. Her wings extended,
she planed to a soggy landing in brush several miles from the
clan camp. She struck lightly enough but one wing hit a branch
within the scrub. Feathers bent, then broke.
It was a painless but exasperating injury. It would unbalance her
flight. Mandy crouched, dazed, in the bushes, panting. Her head
drooped as the light stun took effect. She slept, safe at least
from those who would have stolen her, but her message
undelivered. In the clan camp all was
quiet. Nothing moved but the breeze twitching the clothing of
those who lay about within its confines. The copter landed. Three
humans emerged to begin raking through the camp. Cregar caught
hold of Ideena before she could get far. "People first. Where's that
man they took alive?" Baris was checking limp
bodies. "He's here, badly injured but he's still alive." He
borrowed a knife from the nearest recumbent Nitra and slashed
once. "Now he isn't." "That wasn't necessary."
Cregar didn't care about the man's death, but if he was ever
deep-probed by some authority he wanted to be able to say he'd
protested. Ideena snorted. "Save it. We
don't have to carry the weight back, and we don't have to pay
him. The natives killed the other three, we just say they got him
too. Maybe this one will even believe it." She took the knife
from Baris, wiped the handle, and pressed it several times at a
number of angles into the Nitra's hand. Then she allowed the
knife to drop as if fallen when his body relaxed,
stunned. "Let them find that. Now,
stop worrying and start looking for my cat's-eyes." They found
cat's-eyes enough, but of the commoner type. Red, gold, and the
occasional black. But of the many times more valuable green or
white used only for ceremony or gifts to a Thunder-talker, they
found nothing. Ideena cursed steadily as she hunted. Baris called from where he
too searched. "I think this is their witch woman. But she isn't
wearing any gems." Ideena came running. "Check
her." "I have.
Nothing." "Look around her. She may
have taken them off and hidden them when she heard us coming
back. She'd have only heard that a minute before. Barely enough
time to get them off, alone hide them away." Baris grunted. "I still
can't find anything." He nudged the stunned woman with his foot.
"Pity we can't take the cow with us. I'd see she
talked." Cregar intervened. "We don't
have time to waste. Pick up anything you want and help me with
this pair." He'd discovered the coyotes where they lay in small
heaps near Tani. The girl too had wisely stripped her cat's-eye
jewelry, gifts of the tribe, and hidden it in a hastily scooped
hole just by the tent rim. In the black and white of dark-lenses
the minor earth disturbance should pass unnoticed. It had. But
Minou and Ferarre had leaped back to be with their friend as the
stuns struck. Now they lay where Cregar could find
them. His voice came harsher.
"Pick up the Ghesh-damned beasts and get back in the copter.
We're going on to that mountain ranch." Ideena turned angrily.
"What? That wasn't agreed." "You want the credits I can
release to your account, you'll do it. Get going." She nodded slowly. "Baris,
fire up the engines. It seems we have one more stop." The limp coyotes were
loaded. The engines sounded their muffled beat, and the machine
lifted, swung to the north, and was gone. Below in the camp,
nothing moved. Not for many hours. But in the air the copter was
traveling at full speed and so was Ideena's tongue. "What are we supposed to do?
Where is this ranch? What are we after there, is there likely to
be anything worth having?" Cregar waved her to silence.
"Baris, head north seventy degrees by west five. You'll see
lights at a hundred and fifty miles. Stun-spray the whole ranch
as we come in. We drop straight down, grab what I want, and lift
again immediately. If you can find anything worth having in that
time, do it. If not you'll have to leave it behind. First
priority is the beasts I indicate. As soon as we're back in the
air head for the port with all the speed you can get out of this
thing." "And land where?" Cregar's smile was hard. "On
the port perimeter to the east near the cargo area. I have it all
arranged." He saw Baris and Ideena
exchange glances. That would hold them. They knew what kind of an
ant's nest they could have kicked over here and they weren't keen
to walk into peacekeepers. If he had a safe way into the ship
they'd hold off. They could always take him once they were
safe—or so they believed. He saw their
bodies relax and hid an unpleasant look. They were effective,
this pair. But incurably small-time and a little too independent.
The guild would never suggest they joined it. He suppressed a
bitter smile. He was just as independent. He'd simply hidden it
better and the guild needed his skills. The abilities this pair
had were a cred a score. The copter droned on until
Baris spoke. "Lights coming up below." Cregar checked the
instruments. "That has to be the Quade ranch. Swing low across it
and stun-spray. Then go back and do the same at right angles. It
should cover any of them out in the other buildings
too." Ideena nodded. "Once we
land, Baris, you stay in the copter. Keep the engines ticking
over and watch out for anyone coming in from elsewhere. Be ready
to lift off as soon as I say." The machine was swinging
through the second line of stun as he nodded in turn. "All done.
Get moving..." The copter dropped like a
stone, landed lightly, and the doors slid open. Cregar vaulted
out. The door of the ranch opened to his thrust and he darted
inside. When the copter swung down Logan had been in the
basement. At the start of the Xik troubles his father had lined
that with proplas—an application of plascrete and
clearplas. Specially treated, it was impervious to stunner and
blaster, and if the house collapsed on top, it would hold those
within safely. Logan heard the engines
above and headed for the stairs, dropping the basement trapdoor
shut behind him. He emerged into the corridor with Surra snarling
beside him just as Cregar entered. Behind him Ideena produced a
selective needier taken from one of the dead men, and shot in
panic; the beast looked like death incarnate as it charged and
Ideena had no plans to die here. Surra dropped, blood pouring
from a gaping wound across the top of her skull. Logan shouted in
anger and kept coming, his hand lashing across to reach his
knife. Her adrenaline pumping now, Ideena shot again and Logan
fell. Cregar bit back his fury at the possible loss of the
dune-cat. It was done and there was no time to fight about
it. He stunned Surra to be safe
then snapped at Baris who had followed them in when he heard the
needier discharge. "Pick the cat up and get her into the back of
the copter. Seal the wound off. If she bleeds to death I'll
deduct half the cred. Move it!" He saw the big cat safely
stowed and returned to search quickly through the house. In the
main family room he found a stunned meercat curled about a
newborn litter. He grabbed the babies and mother and leaped for
the copter again. He dumped the box of meercats carefully, then
returned to look through the house. Somewhere there was an eagle.
He wasn't sure if he wanted to find that or not. But for his own
pride he had to know he'd looked. After that he found the safe.
It was impossible to open in the time he had but there were a
number of small items of value about the room. He returned to the
copter with filled pockets. "Where's Ideena?" "Looting, of course," Baris
drawled. "Rev the
engines." "That'll bring her." He
obeyed and the woman came running, her arms full of small
plunder. Baris shifted a hand, the engines rose a note, and the
copter lifted. Ideena took her seat and strapped in as the
machine fled low and fast for the port. "I found a few good things.
Makes up for that jewelry we couldn't find on the native." She
displayed her loot and Baris grunted approval. Cregar leaned
forward and selected a ring from the pile. It was from old Earth,
Cregar thought. Silver, with a flawed grass-green garnet as the
stone. Some skilled gemstone-carver had etched that with the head
of a cat in three-quarter profile. It seemed to look sideways at
him. "I'll take this. It isn't
worth much and I know someone who'd like it." He saw their
sneers. They thought him enamored of some woman. Nor did they
recognize the work as Terran. They saw only the flawed stone. He
smiled into the dark. Laris would be delighted by the cat's-head
ring. He'd give it to her as recompense for his return and the
loss of his stashed credits—and for her warning which had
saved him a spear in the back. He'd have to tell her not to wear
it if they ever returned to Arzor though. He dropped the ring
into his pocket and sat back. The copter raced the
daylight as it hurtled across country. It beat the sun by a
narrow margin. Dawn was showing dimly as it set down quietly
behind the largest cargo shed. Cregar was first out. He peered
about. A man approached and hissed softly. "One is sent." "One is found." "Good. Dump whatever you
have into these." Two men wheeled in large covered pallets and
the raiders got busy. Surra went in, her bleeding stopped
although Cregar didn't like the way she breathed. Dedran would be
furious if another beast died. After that they loaded the
uninjured but still stunned coyotes and meercats. That haul was
good enough to temper rage. The meercat female would stay alive
to care for her babies, and the babies wouldn't care where they
were so long as they had their mother. What was more, the babies
wouldn't be even loosely bonded to anyone as yet; he'd claim a
pair for himself before any other person reached for
them. The man was nervously
tossing them port coveralls. "Here, quick, put these on over your
gear. Push the pallets up to your ship. Will it unlock as you get
there?" Baris nodded. "I can voice
trigger it when we're close. It'll drop the ramp on
command." "Good. Take the pallets and
coveralls with you. No time to leave them." He was checking the
chrono on his wrist. "Go that way," he pointed. "Behind the shed
and around from the other side. It puts you closest to your ship
without being seen until you leave cover. Security will scan
anytime now. You go the minute I say. You have one hundred fifty
seconds to reach the ship before they see you moving. On my
mark—" He held his hand across their
path. Then, "Go!" With Cregar in the lead
pushing one pallet, Baris right behind him shoving the other,
Ideena racing up to pass both men, they made for the ship. In his
head Cregar was ticking off the time. Fifty seconds, a hundred.
Baris called a hoarse order and the ramp began to lower. One
hundred fifty seconds and from behind them a Klaxon howled.
Ideena slowed to scoop up a stunner from the weeds. The ramp hit
the dust and Ideena was first up, running for the bridge. Baris
shouted an order as he and Cregar thrust the pallets up the
ramp. The ramp began to close
behind them and the ship shivered into life as engines obeyed the
final order. Beside him Cregar heard a clang as someone shot at
the closing ramp. It snapped shut obliviously. He grabbed for
ties. They'd have to up-ship right now. No time to sort out the
beasts. Just hope they could lift before any heavier port
security came into play. There certainly appeared to be a lot of
activity in the main building. He could see lights coming on all
over the place. Someone was shouting at them
with a loudspeaker. Someone else had fired up a laser cutter on a
crawler heading toward the ship. He could see the ruby winking as
it lit. Baris and Ideena weren't listening. They'd flung
themselves into seats on the bridge, the engines were screaming,
and even as Cregar threw himself flat the ship howled upward.
Baris must be pulling five gravities, he thought dizzily. But at
least he could think. They hadn't been shot down yet. He hoped
the big cat would survive such a liftoff. The ship cleaved sky,
higher, higher. A vanishing silver splinter until it was gone.
Below the port manager was resolving to make some very stringent
inquiries. Her security shouldn't have been that slow. Whoever
that bunch had been they'd had help from some at Arzor Port.
She'd find whoever they were and make them sorry. The port was
autonomous, but for an insult like that she'd work with the
peacekeepers. Even the patrol. No one raped her port and
walked away laughing. On the High Peaks ranch
Logan was drifting into consciousness. He hurt. He crawled
bleeding from room to room unable to accept what had happened.
Surra was gone, taken. So too were Hing and her babies. What was
he going to tell Storm? He heard hoofbeats outside just as he
slipped into darkness again. In the Djimbut clan camp
Tani stood shakily. She reeled toward the comcaller and gasped
out a message. Then she sat limply waiting for her strength to
return a little and her stun-headache to abate. The
Thunder-talker joined her. They sat in silence, both outraged,
both determined. This insult would be avenged. Neither as yet had
realized that the coyotes had gone. In the basin, Brad Quade
finished breakfast and answered a call. He blew out a mouthful of
swankee as he heard, dropped the cup, and ran for the door.
Moments later his crawler left a plume of dust along the road
toward the port. He drove with a reckless disregard for the road
or his own safety. Kelson's copter came in overhead and settled
on the first suitable spot. Brad's vehicle raced up. "Talk fast, Kelson. What's
going on?" "You've been raided. I'm on
the way to the Djimbut camp. Tani called from there. She says
some copter came in during the night, attacked the Nitra. Stunned
everyone, stole her coyotes, as much cat's-eye jewelry as they
could find, and left again." Brad opened his mouth and was waved
to silence. "That's not all. The clan
got four of the raider's men. I want to go there first and see if
we can ID any of the bodies. They went on to hit your place at
High Peaks. Storm commed in. He got back after line-riding to
find Logan hurt bad; Surra and some of the meercats are missing."
Brad sat. Then he spoke quietly. "There's more, isn't
there?" "Yup, we lost the damn
raiders too. Somehow they got back into the port and managed to
up-ship. Port manager's going crazy. She swears they didn't do
that without someone helping them and she's going to bring in the
peacekeepers." Kelson eyed the big rancher. "Keep it together,
Brad. Logan will be okay. Tani isn't hurt. We'll find out who it
was and get the animals back." "This ties in with those
other reports." "Seems likely. I have one of
my men alerting other planet ports. We may pick them up
elsewhere. The city security knows too." He grinned wryly. "I
gather they aren't any happier about this than the port manager.
Their officer here has made an offer to the port manager to bring
in a deep probe and operator. Last I heard she was thinking about
it. That's how serious she's taking everything." "Guada's First-ship family
too," Brad said absently. "Our families have been friends since
then. I'd do the same for her." He lapsed into brooding silence
again as the copter hurtled on. It all fit together somehow.
The dead beast masters, the missing beasts. The way in which the
raiders had been able to arrive unnoticed and lift off again
despite a closed port. They'd had a copter, he remembered. And
left four men dead in the clan camp. Those would be places to
start. With his teeth in the beginnings of a solution he'd not
let go. A small deadly smile quirked his mouth. Nor would his
kin. Storm was a trained fighter,
a beast master who'd fought the Xiks across a dozen worlds. Tani,
small, slender, untrained, was still in many ways Storm's equal.
They'd stood shoulder to shoulder against the enemy before. And
Logan, his wild-blooded son who loved the wilderness more than
civilization. Logan who'd lost his half-brother's beasts and a
fight against the raiders. They were three to take up a war trail
indeed. And that they would do. He had only to find the trail
head for them. That was his work. He set his teeth and willed
calm. He'd be of no use if he allowed his anger to rule. First
let them land at the clan camp and see what they could do to help
there. He leaned forward to touch Kelson on the arm. "The Nitra, they know we're
coming?" "The Thunder-talker has
spoken. We are welcome to land and collect the dead. Tani's
coming back to High Peaks with us. Jumps High and a couple of his
people will lead Tani's mount back to the basin." "Any word of the
paraowl?" "Not when I
left." Brad fell silent again. If
his young daughter-in-law had lost not only her beloved coyote
friends but also Mandy she would be utterly devastated. When the
copter sank to a landing the girl was the first there. She was
leading Djimbut warriors who carried four bodies, one trampled
and hoof-slashed almost beyond recognition as human. Brad
grunted. That would be the work of Destiny, Tani's filly,
three-quarter duo-corn and wholly ferocious to any she deemed a
threat. Tani was everywhere now:
guiding the bodies into the copter cargo hold, finger-talking
rapidly with Jumps High, then the Djimbut medicine woman. Finally
she came to stand looking at Brad. "Asizi." She used the ancient word of
address. "We have none of our own dead. The Nitra will leave
vengeance to us unless we ask. Of what lives were taken none were
theirs, by the Thunder's will." The Thunder-talker moved up to
stand by the girl. She spoke and her interpreter's hands
flickered with quick fluency. "The enemy would have taken
the gems which mark my power. But for the quick thinking of my
younger sister all would have been lost. Her spirit-friends twice
heard the enemy and twice that aided us to be ready. The clan
stands with their clan-friend. If there be anything in which we
can aid in return, let it be known." Kelson gave the bow over
linked spread hands which was the Nitra acknowledgment in all
formality of the Thunder-talker's power. Then he lifted them to
sign. "Gratitude. The enemy evil
ones were ours. To ours the law which judges. Our clan is greatly
angered, we ride in war. Yet if there is need, be sure we shall
ask." She made the small
cupped-hand gesture of acceptance and turned away. From where
Tani stood, there came a loud cry and the girl was running. Both
Brad and Kelson jumped from the machine to follow. They reached
her as she halted, half laughing, half crying. "Mandy. She's all right."
From the brush along the camp edge stumped a weary, still almost
flightless paraowl. She had flown where she could, walked where
she must, and Mandy had not appreciated the walking part of the
journey. Tani dropped linked arms to make a bridge and the tired
bird clambered up to sit on a padded shoulder. There she rested,
drawing her beak gently down Tani's cheek and crooning softly as
she sent a series of pictures. Tani examined the indicated wing
and sighed before turning to the men. "I sent her to take you a
message, Brad. The copter came in faster and spray-stunned
farther out than I expected. The stunner fringe caught Mandy as
she flew, and knocked her silly. She landed several miles away
without breaking more than some of the flight feathers in one
wing. So she couldn't fly more than a few yards at one time.
She's been flying and walking back here ever since." Mandy made a disgusted
spitting sound and there was laughter. Kelson had been
translating Tani's words into sign-talk as she went. Even Nitra
faces broke up in amusement at Mandy's obvious disgust at having
to walk. "She has very good hearing
though. The copter came back very low still past her and she
heard a few words. Say them for us, Mandy." The ferocious beak
opened and an incongruous voice sounded. It was female, the
accent was inner-systems and over-cultured. "...men. Oh, all right... go
to this place. But there'd better be something there worth having
besides those stupid animals. Your boss won't thank you for more
of them dead either..." Mandy stopped and waited for the generous
praise she promptly received. Kelson looked at them. "That
might be useful. We can't run a voice scan on an imitation but
it's so good to a human ear I'd bet experts at the school can
tell us which world the woman comes from. Maybe more. Right now,
we'd better head for High Peaks." He waited for Tani to settle
Mandy before leading the way back to the copter and ushering them
inside. He leaned out to sign to Jumps High. "What do you want of
us?" "The bow hands of the
enemies who do this," was the swift reply. "If that cannot be
done, then bring us sure word of their deaths. Bring us a
death-trophy we can hang in the medicine tent." Kelson's hands
moved in acknowledgment of that. Then he slid the door shut and
started the engines. Tani glanced at the paraowl as they lifted.
Mandy's feathers could be fixed as soon as they reached the basin
ranch and had a night's rest. She hoped Logan would be well. Brad
had mentioned only that he'd been hurt. Logan had been more than
merely hurt. Storm, when he came running into the house, had
found his brother lying in a spreading pool of blood. His eyes
opened as Storm knelt by him and he tried to rise. "Lie quiet. I'll get this
bleeding stopped. Think about what you want me to know." He
worked for several minutes before sitting back. "That's well.
Wait now." He turned to slide open the door in a cupboard. Behind
that was a small chilled area with a palm-lock. From it he took
medical items and used them quickly. "Now, talk fast,
brother." Logan looked up. "Raiders.
Copter." He spoke between gasps, his strength fading again. "Took
Surra, Hing, her babies. Surra bad hurt, still alive. One..." his
voice slid into silence before he drew on the last of his
strength. "Woman, Storm. Woman shot me." His eyes shut and his
body went limp in his brother's arms. Storm checked the medkit
frantically. No, all was well. Logan might be long in mending
completely. But he'd survive. He rose, lifting Logan to
carry him to a bed. Then he permitted himself to consider the
words briefly. It was possible. Arzor had rarely suffered pirate
raids. It had little of portable value save for the cat's-eyes,
and for those alone major raiding cost more than it could recoup.
At a glance he'd seen at least two rooms had been looted of small
valuables. They hadn't attempted to open the safe though, as real
pirates would have done. And the raiders had also gone out of
their way to take beast master animals. That argued they were
tied in with the other deaths and abductions. Yet if they wanted the
animals why hadn't they seen by now that it was futile? The
beasts died. Why would they continue? He shook his head. Maybe
this time the raider boss had been lucky. Surra could die, that
was quite likely if she was in their hands and away from Storm
too long. The meercats would probably survive. He hated to think
of small, affectionate Hing and her new babies in cruel or
uncaring hands. She'd never known anything but
affection. There was no time to think
any further of that. He reached for the com. Kelson at the other
end was almost incoherent with haste. No time to talk. He'd be
there with Brad and Tani in two or three hours. Storm should hold
on and wait. He did so but it seemed far longer than the time
promised before he heard the ranger copter slipping in from
overhead. Tani was first out and straight into his
arms. Chapter Ten Storm reached out to hold
Tani protectively. He could feel the shivers which shook her.
This was personal distress, not only a reaction to Logan's hurt
and the abduction of part of Storm's team—fond as she was of her
brother-in-law and of Storm's animals. His gaze met the worried
gaze of his stepfather over her head. Storm's instincts told him
there was something he hadn't heard as yet. "Asizi? What else has happened?" But
Brad was entering the house. He'd see Logan for himself. It was
Kelson who spoke quickly. "The raiders must have come
on to High Peaks. They hit the Djimbut first. No, no one of the
Nitra was badly hurt. But they seem to have had a double agenda
there. They were after cat's-eye gemstones and
beasts." Tani lifted her head. "They
took Minou and Ferarre," she wept. "They stunned Mandy but she
got away from them." Her eyes glowed fury before filling with
pain once more. "We killed four of them but they still got away
with my friends." Until now Storm had not
completely reacted to the loss of Surra and Hing and her babies.
Now that loss filled him. His arms clamped Tani to him and his
head bent over hers. A silent moan of pain tore through him. Tani
felt the echo of his grief. "Storm, what is it, are you
hurt?" "Surra, Hing, and her
babies. They took them as well." He felt her stiffen. She stepped
back. Her face was transformed into an implacable rage. Her hands
came up slowly from her sides, fingers crooked a little. The
anger coming from her was so powerful Storm could feel it against
his mind like heat. He stiffened—there were times when he forgot
that she had lived on Terra during the Xik attacks, lost her
father to the enemy, and seen her mother killed. She'd fled her
world to escape being mind-broken or killed and survived it all.
Under the gentleness of her surface lived a woman who was
descended from one of the greatest female warriors of her people.
Six months earlier when courage was needed, she had not been
found wanting. "Surra, Hing and the babies,
Minou, and Ferarre." Her voice was the long dangerous note of a
warhorn as she roll-called. "We'll find where the raiders went."
She turned on Kelson. "What do we know?" He restrained himself
from stepping back at the intensity of that demand. At the rage
which filled the small slender body. He spoke slowly, wanting to
defuse that flaring fury. "Whoever they were they had
help on Arzor. The port manager swears no one could have breached
security without aid. We're an outer world and security isn't
what it can be on an inner world, but it's good enough. I acted
on Tani's first call. We'd closed the port before they reached
it. So they should have been picked up entering the gates. They
weren't." He remembered manager Gauda's report on that and his
own anger rose. "They got across the
permacrete landing area and entered their ship disguised as cargo
handlers. To do that they had someone's help. The manager was
certain of that much once she'd checked the security tapes. She's
so furious she has accepted a patrol offer. They'll bring in an
operator with a deep probe. She's made that known and thinks it
may..." A series of urgent beeps sounded from the ranger copter.
"Excuse me." He pulled down the hush
cover and talked, listened, talked again. Then he lifted the
cover as a pleased look spread over his weathered
face. "Nice timing. One of the
people involved has talked. It seems likely he's scared of what
else the probe could uncover. He's a small-fry. Not really
involved. Just bribed to leave coveralls and a couple of pallets
in an unusual place and let the raiders know where and how to
dodge the scanner for long enough to get a head start to their
ship. But he knew who bribed him. That's the first mistake. He
wasn't supposed to but he did. The peacekeepers are out picking
up that one now." Storm imagined Surra,
injured, in pain, separated from the human who had walked beside
her so long. She would not bow to others. She was a cat and it
was not in her nature. She would fight them every step of the
way. She would end up dead like the others the raiders had
stolen. But Hing, so happy with her new litter and new mate after
being so long alone. The kidnapers would take the babies as soon
as they were old enough to be weaned. And Hing who needed her
kind about her would be alone once more. The pain of their loss tore
at him. He thrust it down. He would be calm. He would hunt down
the thieves and when he found them they'd talk. He'd have his
team whole again or die in the hunt. He had no idea of the image
he made. Nor how Tani had merged her own fury, then control, with
his. Together they turned to study the ranger. "When are they likely to
have this talker?" "Anytime now, but Storm,
they won't let you talk..." "We'll take Logan down to
the hospital. Then we'll see what happens." Kelson surrendered. "Yes.
Logan is most important right now." They flew back to the city.
Logan was wheeled away. A doctor paused to speak before he too
followed the stretcher. "He'll be fine. Don't worry. Come back in
the morning." Brad hesitated. Storm laid a
hand on his stepfather's shoulder. "Go with Logan. Tani will be
with me. When we're done we'll go to the ranch house. We can hire
a vehicle to return there." "No need. The crawler's at
the edge of the port. I left it there when Kelson collected me.
Use that." Storm nodded and stepped back. Brad headed for the
hospital doors and vanished as Storm turned to eye
Kelson. "Tani and I will go to the
port. I want to talk to Port Manager Gauda there and I may be
able to have a few words with others." "If you mean the man who was
bribed, they won't let you near him. Go back to the ranch. If the
authorities want to talk with you they'll find you." "I'd rather find them.
Wastes less time." His tone was implacable and Kelson threw up
his hands. "Do what you want to. You
will anyhow, the same as Logan usually does." "And that's made him one of
the best rangers you have," Storm returned. "Think about it. This
bunch attacked a Nitra clan camp. They didn't kill anyone, but if
they had the Djimbut clan would have ridden to war. Worse still,
if they'd succeeded in stealing the Thunder-talker's regalia
other Nitra clans would have joined them." He punched the air for
emphasis. "Think. It isn't impossible
even the Norbie clans could have united with them. An affront to
the Thunder or a demand from it is one of the few things that
could unite both the wild and civilized tribes. It did once
before. A dead Nitra warrior or two is one thing. Stealing
objects of power and desecrating them is a lot more." Tani cut in quietly. "You
know the patrol's attitude on settled planets where there's
already a native people. Point out to them that the raiders could
have begun war here. That makes it of patrol interest as well as
ranger business. Causing war between native and human settlers is
an interworld crime. What if the raiders do something like this
elsewhere?" Kelson's face had been
hardening as he listened. He'd thought of the possibilities
himself but had not considered the patrol in this. A year back,
the lethal Xik-bred clickers had driven the wild clans from their
desert lands. The patrol would have forced the human settlers to
evacuate their ranches, then Arzor, rather than see a
settler—native war. He nodded
slowly. "I'll talk to the patrol
office here about this. Tani's right. If she hadn't figured out
that the raiders wanted gems then we could be facing a native
uprising. If the raiders pull something similar elsewhere the
patrol could have a civil war on their hands. And to my mind this
all ties in with what Tani's kin discovered from other worlds.
Someone's trying to collect augmented beasts from beast master
teams." He stood a moment, his face
thoughtful. Even with Terra a burned-out cinder, enough of the
fleet and command structure had survived. A new High Command had
risen which governed the patrol and the reactivated survey
section. Most often now they acted as a clearinghouse for
information and as the arbiters of final decisions. "This could bring in High
Command. It could even be that the raids are another Xik
brew." Storm shook his head. "It
doesn't feel like that." "Maybe not. But do you know
it isn't for sure?" "Of course not." "But if High Command gets
involved you have a lever," Kelson said softly, a grin sliding
over his face. Tani chuckled. "He's got you
there, my love. As a beast master they'd talk to you, get your
opinion. Maybe let you talk to whoever the probe turns up here.
Of course the Xiks could be involved." Her love looked down at her.
"Cunning little warrior, aren't you?" "I learned from the best,"
Tani retorted ambiguously. "Now can we start for the port? Time
is moving on." The ranger turned. "I can
drop you at Brad's crawler. After that I'll talk to the patrol
officer. Her Office is at the port too. Check with me before you
leave for the ranch. If I've heard anything more I can tell you
then." He climbed into the copter and waited until they were
strapped in. Then he lifted for the port. Tani and Storm exited
the machine by the crawler. "Where first?" 'The port manager. We may be
able to tell her a few things. This way." Tani came with him,
their linked arms giving mutual comfort and support. The port manager's office
was a whirl of activity. People came and went, peacekeepers
walked through the milling staff, and now and again they could
hear the manager's voice cutting through the din. Storm forged a
path in and leaned forward, resting his hands on the
desk. "I'm—" "I know who you are." She
raised her voice again. "Everyone out. I want to talk to these
two. Out!" The office cleared, the last man out shutting the door
behind him. Gauda looked them over and grinned, a tired harassed
smile that nevertheless managed to be surprisingly
sweet. "What I want from the pair
of you are times. My man admits he was bribed. He claims it
wasn't done until the raiders had reached the port. I know damn
well he's a liar. The man he's named doesn't know a thing. He's
so furious about the accusation, he did what Hasset never
expected him to do and submitted to probe to prove that. It did.
Now he's with his lawyer and laying a suit for several million
credits on Hasset." Tani giggled. Gauda smiled in
reply. "Yeah. Funny. But not for
Hasset. It seems while working as a lowly cargo handler he's
managed to build up quite a nest egg. Gambling, he says.
But he does have a fair amount to lose." Her smile sweetened.
"And somehow the man he accused has found out about all those
nice credits. Not a million, but if even part of the claim is
allowed it'd wipe Hasset out and garnish his wages for the rest
of his life. We're trying to persuade Hasset that we can get the
suit dropped if he talks. Loud, clear, and very, very fully. We
want every question answered honestly with all he can tell
us." "And?" Storm's eyes were
savage. "He's thinking about it. If
you can give me times we may be able to prove some of his lies
back to him. If we do that we can legally probe him. Show him
that and he'll crack." She leaned forward. "He's a little man.
Never one to take big risks. He's in over his head with all this
and he's scared to death. Every time I question him he's standing
there sweating in panic. If we can show him an escape he'll take
it." "Sweating in panic?" Storm
said slowly. "That isn't a man who's just scared of losing
credits. That's a man who sees an immediate threat. Why does he?
Because I think he knows if he talks someone will come after
him." He paused, leaping to a sudden conclusion. "Or perhaps
because they're already here! Where's he being held?" Gauda was on her feet, hand
slapping a switch. "Theo, check Hasset. I'm worried." "The doctor isn't here,
Manager Gauda." Storm wrenched the door open
and they were running, all three of them, Gauda in the lead. Down
corridors until they came to the open door of a storeroom. Inside
the doctor bent over the prisoner. Gauda stopped dead and groaned
in frustration. It took only a brief glance. Hasset the liar lay
sprawled, face blue, eyes staring, body contorted in a last
agony. Dr. Theo Blandaay looked up.
"Too late, I'm afraid. He's taken farakill." Storm drifted
silently forward as the doctor turned back to his patient. His
hands went out to close on pressure points in the doctor's neck.
Theo slumped. "Hoy, that's..." Gauda was
protesting. "The man who killed Hasset,
I suspect. Look, when you found Hasset you questioned him. Was
this man there?" "Of course. He's doctor for
the port." "Did you search Hasset
before you locked him in here?" Gauda nodded. "One of the
peacekeepers did it. A good thorough job too." "Yes," Storm said softly.
"So where did the farakill come from?" He stirred Dr. Blandaay's
limp body thoughtfully with one foot. "He'll stay out another
twenty minutes or so. The question is, how did he know it was
time? That we could have something to make that poor fool talk.
Or was he just afraid the man would betray him as soon as the
pressure went on?" Tani had been silent; now
she trotted away, back to the port manager's office. She
returned, followed by Gauda's assistant. Before either Gauda or
Storm could question that, Tani was asking questions of her
own. "Your name?" "Falia Tedisco, I'm
assistant to Port Manager Gauda." The young woman's stance was
proud, her eyes defiant. Gauda intervened. "Falia was
promoted to be my assistant a year ago. I trust her as myself."
She looked at the girl. "Falia, this is nothing against you.
We've had another killing. Help Tani. Answer her questions." They
watched as Falia relaxed, her stance now indicating a willingness
to reply. "You know Dr.
Blandaay?" "Yes. He became port doctor
soon after I was promoted to assistant." Her tone was
edged. "But you don't much like
him?" "Weeell..." Falia was
doubtful. "It's not that he's ever said or done anything to
me. But he acts as if no one is as important as he is. And
I heard him being rude about Manager Gauda once. He seemed to
think she didn't do her job as well as others could." Her face
flushed. "It isn't true. Manager Gauda is the best the port has
ever had. Why, since she took over the port revenues have
tripled. And without setting ship captains against us. She knows
where to spend money and where to cut wastage and..." Tani smiled. "And you think
the doctor might not have always liked where the cuts were
made?" "No. Everyone knows he was
taking money to help ship crews with sickness. Manager Gauda
added that to the port log." Tani looked to Gauda for
explanation. The middle-aged manager was looking both surprised
and amused at the revelations. "It seems I stepped on
Blandaay's schemes without knowing it. And while 'everyone' might
have known what he was doing, I wasn't one of them. It went like
this: The man's been here on Arzor a long time. He didn't work
for the port full time but he was paid a small retainer to come
and see to the staff when necessary. I've never heard anything
against him. So when I reorganized I hired him as full-time port
doctor. That meant he was hired at a flat salary to tend any crew
from a ported ship who might arrive ill and to clear ship crew
after looking them over for any signs of illness. I had no idea
he was taking extra payment for that. But, recently, when I
rewrote the new port greeting for incoming ships, I included the
information that he was the port doctor as a matter of record."
She laughed. "I can believe Blandaay
wouldn't appreciate that. I ruined his extra income since all
ships after that would know they didn't have to pay his extra
fees. Falia, why didn't anyone mention this to me?" "We all thought you knew.
That you'd chosen that way of fixing the problem without stirring
up trouble." Tani nodded. "You probably
would have done it that way if you had known. Now, Falia, today.
You were in the outer office before myself, Storm, and Manager
Gauda all came hurrying out. Who else was there?" "No one." The girl looked
puzzled. "You chased out all of the others. There was just me
left. The doctor went off to check port records or something next
door. He came out a few minutes later and went away. Then you all
came running out." "Next door?" Gauda moved. "Thank you,
Falia. Go back to your office now. I want you to call the patrol
office once you get back. Make sure no one hears you. Tell
Officer Versha that I request her attendance as soon as possible.
Say it's code black." She waited until Falia left, shutting the
storeroom door behind her. Then she stared down at the sprawled
figures. "You were right. The record room next door is from the
old administration when security was more casual. It opens to
both Falia's office and my own. Blandaay had only to ease the
door ajar and listen." Tani started to speak and was waved
silent. "No, you didn't see that. You wouldn't. The door into my
office isn't used much. With the renovations going on in the
building there's a stack of interior lining sheets leaning across
it on my side. But the door opens inward to the record
office." Storm saw. "So he could open
the door a fraction, hear everything, and then make sure Hasset
couldn't talk." Remembering events during his war years he
sighed. "He may have told Hasset that he'd give him a pill. One
which would help Hasset resist deep probe." Gauda looked disgusted.
"Hasset would certainly have been dumb enough to believe it. We
were supposed to stay up there talking a while longer. Then we'd
have come down, found Hasset dead, and had no idea that it was
more than the suicide of a guilty man. This is a storeroom. Not a
cell. There's no record of who enters or leaves." She looked at Storm. "If you
hadn't suddenly wondered why Hasset was sweating so hard we'd
have missed it all. Blandaay must have stayed just long enough to
hear me say that with the times you two could give us and the
amnesty I'd offer, I was sure we could break Hasset." Storm's answering smile was
ferocious. "So we can't break Hasset now. But what odds would you
give me that our healer here doesn't know even more?" "No odds," Gauda said
cheerfully. "I never bet against sure things. Storm, make sure he
doesn't come to again yet. Then watch him a moment. I know where
there is a spare roller pallet. We'll take him up to my office.
First we search him down to the skin. If he had farakill on him
there should be traces somewhere. I suspect Versha will be on her
way. Once we tell her all of this she'll act. Versha is something
of a hothead. That's why she's on a backwater outer planet. She
acted fast once before. She was right but she annoyed some
powerful man who was embarrassed by her actions. She'll enjoy
this." Versha swept in with a
uniformed probe operator in tow minutes after they wheeled
Blandaay to Gauda's office. The patrols officer on Arzor was a
round, plumply innocent-looking woman. But her black eyes in the
dark-skinned face were sharply penetrating and intelligent. She
listened to the saga, nodded to her operator, and herself helped
them dump Blandaay into Gauda's chair, fastening his hands and
feet firmly. Then she hitched a buttock onto the desk
edge. "Get on, boy. If we start
before he's come properly awake he'll be under before he can
start fighting it." Storm and Tani said nothing.
Doing it that way was illegal but neither planned to protest.
Blandaay wouldn't remember, and if he was guilty as they believed
then it was better he had no chance to fight his way to
mindlessness. The probe lattice was slipped on, patches and
sensors connected, and the questioning began. Kelson arrived
halfway through. Falia ushered him in and left again. Her eyes
averted from the thing which babbled in the chair. Kelson opened his mouth,
listened to what Blandaay was saying, and shut his mouth again.
Blandaay was confessing that he'd been corrupted long ago, that
he'd come to Arzor from his home world of Lereyne to escape a
charge of negligence. That he'd been helped, had that complaint
wiped back home, that the whole of his almost twenty years on
Arzor he'd been in the pay of someone. First renegades, men who
took quiet profit from the Xik. They'd fled after Storm had
exposed the surgically altered Xik aper who led them. After that
another had come who knew the secret. Blandaay had been offered a
choice: The whip, or the carrot. A fat, very juicy and profitable
carrot. If aiding the enemies of
humanity hadn't bothered him, then working for a mere Thieves
Guild member had worried him still less. Blandaay had snatched at
the carrot. It hadn't entailed much in the time he'd been on the
payroll. Just allowing the occasional crew member in on the
quiet, ignoring any irregularity his master didn't want noticed.
A doctor is in a good position to notice things about others
though. Blandaay had his standing orders for a profile on any
permanent member of the port staff. Then finally a more specific
order. He was to approach a cargo handler and suborn him. Have
the man sneak three people through the sealed port. Blandaay had
protested. It was dangerous. What if the man was seen, what if he
was taken and talked? That was discounted. He was a doctor wasn't
he? Let him dispose of the man once his usefulness was done. Let
Blandaay remember what could be told to the authorities if he
failed. The doctor had shivered—and obeyed. Versha nodded slowly. "All
right. Let him rest a few minutes. Search him now. If we find
traces of farakill on him we can fully justify this
interrogation. If not—" She grinned. "Well, I've been in
trouble before." A short time later she was eyeing the result.
Gingerly she picked it up, crushing the capsule. "Looks as if
I've been declared right. That's farakill." The silvery crystals
glistened. "Gauda, have your lab check if it matches the spectrum
in Hasset's bloodstream. If so we're in the clear and this
interrogation tape is legal as well." She reached for the office
intercom. "Falia, call the port lawyer. Tell him we are asking
for a probe permit for a Dr. Blandaay. And check if he has a
lawyer of his own. If he does, call him here too." She reset the
switch, cutting off the girl's surprised agreement. "I'm gambling it will match,
and that call will leak as well. It'll take the lawyers half an
hour to get into action. But the leak will probably be with this
filth's boss in a few minutes." She grinned cheerfully. "Let's
just get that question answered and start making him look
presentable again." She signaled the probe operator. "Blandaay. The Thieves Guild
man, who is he? Tell us about him. Everything you
know." "M-m-m. Marrice." "Yes, good. Marrice
who?" A silly smile spread over
Blandaay's face as his voice shifted into the harsher accents of
Lereyne. "There was a little fishy who lived in a net," he
chanted. "Net, debt. Debt paid." He choked. His face congested,
and he slumped down in his seat. Versha uttered several
words. "Too late. He was sealed against betrayal. A very nice
piece of conditioning—if it really worked. That last
bit sounded as if it came right out of his subconscious. If we'd
started the probe when he was completely conscious he'd have died
the moment he tried to reply. He was only half conscious so he
took longer for the conditioning to work. We just may have got
something." She pounced on the switch. "Population lists? See if
Falia can do a scan for anyone at all with the first name of
Marrice." Gauda shook her head, her
hand stopping Versha from touching the switch. "No need. I think
I can guess. There's a man named Marrice Plarron. One of my
patrol friends from Lereyne was talking to me a while ago. Jared
wondered where Plarron's money comes from." Versha looked puzzled.
"Plarron, what does that have to do with debts or
fish?" "Blandaay came from
Lereyne." She saw light leap in Storm's eyes. "Yes, you've
remembered." She looked at them. "On Lereyne there's a major port
on the inland sea. I know the man who's port manager there. It's
a fishing port. Specializes in canning, drying, producing
dehydrated flakes. Just about anything you can do with fish for
export. A lot of ships land there direct for cargoes." She took
in a deep breath. "It's called Port Plarronet." Versha moved purposefully to
the intercom. "I'll have a word with the peacekeepers. I think
with my authority that's enough to have him picked up. Probing
may be a different matter." So was collecting Marrice
Plarron. Those who went to scoop him in found the net empty.
There was a hunt, but Marrice Plarron was gone. However in his
panic to get clear of retribution he'd left enough odds and ends
of only partly destroyed information to be useful. It became a
matter of putting the jigsaw together. In that, Storm and Tani
could be little help. Storm rode the basin lands
and the ranch had never been so meticulously run. Tani spent time
spacegramming her aunt and uncle. Kady and Brion had contacts in
strange places. And it could be surprising what unworldly
scientists sometimes learned. For the two who ran the ark, they'd
even pass it on. Maybe if the net was flung wide enough something
might be trawled up. Logan was recovering slowly;
Brad had him back at the main ranch in a month. Time dragged on
and they were no closer to knowing where Surra, Hing, and her
babies might have gone. All they could do was hope that the
beasts still lived. By now the kidnappers would be reaching
several planets. Once ported they could disappear. Then there came a call from
Gauda. They'd partly broken the false ID provided for the raider
ship. Not what it truly was, but the world providing it. Trastor!
And more, several linguists had listened to the record made of
the brief words Mandy had overheard. The accent was lower
merchant-class from the world of Brightland. Overlaid with a
would-be upper-level accent. The combination rang bells with a
peacekeeper chief at Brightland's largest city. "He's sure it's a woman
named Ideena. She calls herself Lady Ideena and travels with a
man named Baris. They're a dangerous pair. Into all sorts of
dirty crimes. He says Ideena is the worst. Both are vicious but
Ideena has brains as well. They have no known connection with the
Thieves Guild. Ideena likes to run things and it's unlikely she'd
join. But they could have been used to get a guild member into
Arzor and out again. It's a starting point." "Do they have any idea where
she is at the moment?" "He's done some private
asking about through personal friends and contacts. She was last
known at Staril Port on Lereyne. It's thought she was intending
to ship on to Trastor. Versha's passed all this on to her
superiors. She'll take a patrol courier ship to Trastor in two
days to make further inquiries. She says if Storm would be
interested in helping with that she can find space." Tani's eyes widened as
Storm's eyes narrowed in suspicion. "Why? The patrol doesn't
usually invite civilians." "Versha says this time it's
different. The raiders could have started a war. And I gather her
immediate superior loathes the Thieves Guild. She's also hoping
that you may be able to sense your beasts if you get close
enough." "In other words I'd be a
ferret being put down a rat hole to see what comes bolting
out." "You've got it. Are you
in?" Storm nodded. He most
certainly was. Chapter
Eleven The circus had been pulling
in crowds. Cover, it might be, but Dedran was delighted. Laris,
too, was pleased. The animals were always happier playing to a
crowd. They understood the approval, the shrieks and applause.
Credits had flowed in. The whole circus atmosphere lightened.
Dedran was even pleasant to Laris, who was surprised but hid it.
She supposed that his boss, whoever that might be, preferred the
circus to pay its way. And what pleased his boss pleased
Dedran. Prauo enjoyed seeing the
performances through her eyes. He still spoke little most of the
time but increasingly she was aware of his emotions. It seemed
that he was aware of hers as well and sometimes when she was
unhappy he'd transmit scenes from the better times. Or just the
remembered feeling so that she laughed and felt happier. Their
performances in the ring drew crowds, which always pleased
Dedran. Prauo playing the ferocious predator, kept only in check
by Laris, dressed in her boy's costume, with a whip and
courage. Dedran preferred it to
appear there were more performers than there were in fact. So to
that end Laris appeared in a different costume, makeup, and wig
for each of the acts in which she was involved. She loved being
in the ring. The feel of the animals' anticipation, their
innocent pride in the applause and a job perfectly done. And she
had no need to strike any of them, only to pretend she did in the
tigerbat act. That pleased both her and Prauo. She wondered when Cregar
would return. He'd been gone just long enough to be due back if
nothing much had gone wrong. It was nice staying somewhere for a
while. There were times when she wondered wistfully what it would
be like to have a real home. To be settled. To live on a ranch,
say, on Arzor. To ride the land knowing it was yours to care for,
to live on for the rest of your life. To love. She wondered what
Storm and Tani were doing just now. And Logan. Particularly
Logan. She'd liked him. More than
she wanted to admit. But she was bonded. There was no future for
her there. Not until the bond was canceled, and not even then if
he ever discovered her part in his brother's loss. Oh, yes. There'd been a
spacegram from Ideena's ship. Laris had managed a brief sight of
it and been interested to learn that there'd been a good season
for swingleberries and that Baris and Ideena had placed and
received a very large order on Dedran's behalf. Laris grinned wryly. Dedran
wasn't so smart. He'd left that lying about briefly, believing it
would tell nothing to anyone who read it. She'd done so, seen
who'd sent it, and guessed the simple code. Cregar had made a
real haul of beasts. They had to be some of Storm and Tani's
teams. She mourned both for the humans she'd liked and the
bewildered animals torn from their homes. They'd be here any day
now and it would be her duty to keep them alive. "Laris!" The voice was a
whip-crack. She turned submissively and Dedran's look became
approving. "Prepare the hidden cages. Cregar will be here
tomorrow." "How many do I
prepare?" His look was triumphant.
"Three of them. Plan space for a pair of beasts of medium size,
one of large, and a number of small." He stalked away, every line
of his departing body shouting his pleasure in the catch. Laris
watched him retreat, remembering. Not the birds, by the sound of
it. She would guess at Surra, the coyotes, and some of the
meercats. Laris hurried off to
prepare. She cleaned the cages again, strewed fresh bedding,
checked the water and feed systems, and went over the gate
mechanisms. The cages were ingenious. Each was built into the
back of a cage used genuinely for some of the circus animals. A
door could be opened at one end revealing stacked gear with hay,
straw, or Tirevian peavines—the soft lengths of that
vegetation being popular as cheap bedding. But that stack of bedding
was a decoy. It appeared to fill the rest of the space from floor
to ceiling. In fact the wall was only one bale thick. If one
operated a hidden sliding door at the other end of the cage back,
there was room to enter. Behind the bales there was a space,
large or small, according to cage size. Concealed holes let in
air. Concealed lights could be left on at different levels. A
pair of peepholes at different heights allowed anyone inside the
hidden section to see out, both into the outer cage, and outside
onto the circus concourse. And the partition which
closed the space off from the open part of the cage could be
removed. When nothing was hidden this was done. On a few
occasions Dedran had maneuvered peacemen into ordering the space
emptied to check. He—or perhaps his patron—had then organized a complaint
about overzealous security upsetting the animals and the peacemen
had been reprimanded. On such worlds most peacemen now left the
circus strictly alone. After all, it had been proven that the
circus had nothing to hide. "Laris?" She emerged from
the last cage and stood waiting. "Is everything ready?" She
nodded. "Good. I've had word. The ship lands in an hour. You'll
be here to take charge of the beasts. Settle them in, feed and
water them, then report to me. To me, you understand? If Cregar
is with me you'll return later." She wanted to ask if Cregar
was now suspect in the shadowy world where they all lived. But
she knew to say nothing. Instead she simply nodded again. Dedran
produced a smile. It was a poor effort but then it was too rare
to be anything else. She noted that too. He must be
pleased. "Run along now. Make sure
the tigerbats are ready for their performance this afternoon.
I'll call you once the animals arrive." Laris ran. Her obedience
would please her bond-master, and right now she wanted to please
him. If she could care for the kidnapped beasts she might be able
to help them. Make sure they remained alive and in good
condition. The more Dedran approved of her the better the chance
that she could do that and he'd agree to anything she might claim
the animals required. She kept an eye on the
circus entrance, so was the first to notice the man who strolled
in, closely followed by two people she remembered. Cregar was
disguised; they were not. But she knew Cregar by his walk. She
withdrew silently behind the row of cages, watching. Behind them
came cargo pallets on lifters. There was no sound from them. They
appeared to be stacked with bales of animal bedding. Laris snorted. Dedran had a
one-track mind with his secrecy, using the same tricks over and
over. He'd better watch out. People who got into ruts were often
buried in them. Cregar was looking about for Dedran who appeared
quickly. They spoke briefly then Cregar and the other two
strolled away. She allowed herself to be seen now. The circus
boss waved her over. "Laris, take this bedding to
the supply area. Take care now. We don't want any
wasted." She understood the order.
"I'll be careful, Dedran. I know this lot's in short supply
lately." Her tone was very faintly sarcastic. He gave her a sharp look and
she reminded herself not to be too pert. Dedran could be stupid
in some ways. But he was smart enough to keep a close eye on her
if she angered him, and happy enough to beat her if he thought
she was overstepping her status. She towed the pallet away, doing
her best to look dumb and innocent. Dedran stared after her
thoughtfully. That reply had been a little too independent. Laris
had come back from her holiday on Arzor a trifle too inclined to
act as if she owned herself instead of belonging to Dedran. He
watched, considering his options with her, as she and the pallet
rounded the corner of the cage and vanished from his
sight. Away from the circus boss,
Laris glanced about. There was no one in sight. She reached up to
flick open the hidden latch at the back of the cage and shove the
pallet forward into hiding. Then safely under cover inside the
first cage, Laris unloaded drugged coyotes and cursed her quick
tongue. She'd managed to turn slightly, to look back, as she
moved the pallet. She'd seen that considering look. Please let
him forget her words, she thought, let him write them off as just
a pert bond-servant. She settled the unconscious coyotes and
checked them. No injuries, and they did not appear to be thinner
than they should be. It looked as if they'd been eating well
enough. In the next cage she
unloaded Hing and the babies. She sat a moment cuddling them.
They were so cute. So sweet. Maybe she could make real friends
with the babies. Although most likely Cregar would have that in
mind for himself. Still, the animals had met her. They might be
prepared to respond to one they'd associate only with their own
people. They might connect Cregar with their abduction. She left
them reluctantly, watching for anyone who might see her as she
exited. Then she moved the pallet
on. The last animal would be under the second false flooring. If
it was Surra it would take Laris all her time to shift the big
cat. She was almost to the cage she had ready when Cregar
appeared quietly. "I'll take her. You make
sure no one can see behind this row. Shift a screen to block it
off." She did so hastily, then held the door open briefly as the
unconscious cat was raised and carried inside. Laris leapt in
behind them and closed the door silently before flicking on the
light. "Get that door locked.
Hurry." He carried Surra forward, placing her on the bedding with
a sigh of relief. Now that she could look at the animal Laris
restrained a cry of anger with difficulty. Cregar saw her face.
He didn't want the child to think this was his fault. "It wasn't me. That Ideena
is an idiot. A space warp. She shot the beast master's brother
and the cat came toward Ideena so she shot the animal as
well." Laris moved so that her face
was hidden. Keeping her voice quiet and level by iron will she
asked, "What about the boy? He was killed?" Cregar shrugged. "Not then.
He was alive when we left and once we were at altitude I saw
someone a few miles out riding toward the house. He should have
survived." He stroked Surra's shoulder. "I hope so. Authorities
are a lot less bothered about chasing leads if no one's dead.
It's this one I'm worried about though. We've kept her asleep the
whole journey. She's been fed intravenously but she has to wake
up sometime." "She met me. Maybe if I'm
the only one to take care of her she'll stay alive," Laris
offered. Cregar grinned knowingly.
"And maybe if you're the only one she knows she'd bond to you. I
don't think so, girl; it doesn't work that way with a beast from
a trained team. Besides, even if she did, you wouldn't want to go
where she'll end up. No. You feed and water them all. Clean them
out when it's needed. I'll be the one who works with them. You're
not to have any more to do with them than you need while doing
your work. Understand? I might not punish you if it happens but
Dedran will and his hand's heavier anyway." "I know." He eyed her sharply. "Has he
been beating you again?" "Not much." She allowed her
shoulders to move uneasily as if in memory. It had been weeks
since Dedran had clouted her for anything but Prauo had reminded
her of the plan. She knew Cregar disapproved of Dedran's habits.
She'd added a set of bruises to her arm as well. Now she let her
sleeve ride up so they could be seen. She shifted her shoulders
again and winced. "And Dedran said I'm to
report about the animals to him." She invested the next words
with significance. "When you aren't around." Cregar looked disgusted.
"Man's crats," he muttered half to himself. Then to her, "Do as
he says. Don't get caught doing anything he forbids. And don't go
poking around. Too long a nose can get cut off." He smoothed
Surra's fur one last time and stood, pushing Laris before him out
of the hidden cage. But not before she had seen the quick flare
of rage in his eyes. He hadn't liked that last bit, or what it
implied about Dedran's trust. "How are the tigerbats? You kept up
their training?" "Of course," Laris said
indignantly. "Don't get upset, I was just
checking." He dug his hand into his pocket and produced
something. "Here. You're a good kid. I know you stayed out of my
stash too. I brought you something. Just don't wear it on Arzor
if you're ever there again." Laris cradled the ring in
her hands, admiring it. She raised wide eyes to Cregar. "It's
beautiful. Thank you. But why can't I wear it on Arzor?" Her face
fell. "Oh, you stole it from the Quades." "Let's say I happened on it
around their place. Don't worry. It's pretty but it isn't worth
much. That's ordinary silver and the stone's flawed. You might
get a couple of credits for it at a thieves' market, that's all.
I reckon it'd been sitting for years at the bottom of the box
where Ideena found it. I doubt they've even noticed it's
gone." He was wrong about that. It
had been one of the first items Brad Quade had missed. Raquel,
his wife, mother of Storm by her first husband, and mother of
Logan after her marriage to Brad, had owned the ring. But it had
descended to her from her own grandmother. The silver and the
stone had both come from the Navaho lands on Terra. Raquel's
great-great-grandmother's husband had dug both, shaped them into
a gift for his adored one. He'd engraved a cat's head on the
stone because her name was Walks-Soft-as-a-Puma. Raquel had died. But the
ring waited for a new woman of the line to take it up. It was
family custom that only a woman of the blood should wear it. The
next one eligible would be a daughter of Hosteen or Logan. Of all
the items stolen, Brad had noticed the absence of the cat ring
first. The other jewelry he'd bought for Raquel. Most of the
pieces were cat's-eye items and had come from Arzor. He was sorry
they'd gone but they could be replaced if he wished and had any
reason to do so. The ring was an heirloom,
irreplaceable. Cregar was right in that it
had little commercial value. Its value was sentimental in both
senses of the word. To the family certainly. But also on a market
composed of many who had lost the world of their birth. Assured
that the ring had come from Terra, that it was old, made from
natural materials from Terra, there were a good number of people
who'd have paid a very reasonable price for it. Far more than the
silver and flawed stone would normally fetch. Brad knew this. Ideena would
have, had she realized where the ring had been created. He hoped
that wherever it had gone, in whoever's hands it ended, they'd
appreciate it. Without knowing any of that, Laris did. Now and
again as she worked through the rest of that day she admired the
green gleam of the stone, the brighter glow of the polished
silver. The small cat head had been carved with consummate skill,
the curves and hollows making it appear as if the tiny head was
alive, the minute eyes watching her with interest. Laris worked hard. At
intervals she returned to check each of the drugged beasts. Hing
and the babies had been drugged only lightly. They were the first
to stir. Laris cradled the sleepy kits in her hands again,
reaching out with her mind as she did with Prauo. They responded
in thoughts which were formless as yet: only emotions of warmth,
comfort in her hands, and a small, diffuse trust. Hing's mind was clearer as
the drug dispersed. But she too relaxed with Laris, to the girl's
delight. After that she tried the coyotes again. She knew that
Cregar had hoped the adult animals might bond with him since
their beast master was not trained. One touch against their
emotions and Laris knew he'd be disappointed in that. It was
Ferarre who touched back. His mind was cunning and coldly angry,
fixed on his own human and the demand for her. Laris saw to the coyotes'
needs and left them quietly to themselves. Let Cregar break
himself against that will; she would not. Nor would she seek to
break the animals to hers. But still she worried. Dedran would
not heed what was said about the beasts' determination to accept
no other master. He expected Cregar to succeed. If the
ex—beast master failed, the circus
boss would have no hesitation in taking samples, then disposing
of the uncooperative beasts. Out of interest Laris had
read a lot on the beast master/beast team links. A human began
with the ability to reach animals by mind-touch and empathy, but
something in that continual touch created a bond over time. In
training the bond was reinforced, both by the constant practice
and by psychological factors as a gene-altered team and their
human learned to trust each other and share their senses. However
some of the bond's strength could depend on the abilities of the
human. Laris could tell by Ferarres's obstinacy, that, untrained
as Tani might be, still her abilities were powerful and her team
was bonded to her very strongly. Storm, of course, had been
trained with his team so that Surra and Hing would never accept
another in his place. Dedran was not going to like any of
that. He'd soon be calling for her
too. She hurried to check Surra last of all. The cat lay
motionless, only the slow rise and fall of her flank betraying
that she still lived. Laris squatted to study the injuries. They
were healing. Clean, not puffy, no indication of infection. But
the cat had retreated into sleep and clearly intended to remain
thus. Well, Laris could give as good a report as possible. That
might buy them all time. As soon as she had finished
her rounds Dedran demanded her presence. The evening performance
would begin in an hour. Laris went to his office, already wearing
part of her costume for the public performance. She also wore the ring, hung
on a chain about her neck under the high collar of her uniform.
Better not to let her bond-master know of the gift. "Well, you've seen all the
new beasts. Are they well?" "The coyotes are angry but
healthy. The meercats are all well and prepared to be friendly.
The cat is still asleep. The injuries heal. Better she sleeps
now, she will heal faster," Laris reported quietly. Dedran permitted the corners
of his mouth to curl upward. "That's good. You think the cat will
eventually recover?" "I think she may, if she is
left to herself and not distressed." That might give Surra a
chance to survive if Dedran heeded. He was nodding. "Tell Cregar to leave her
be," he ordered. "Care for her yourself." He switched to a glare.
"Make no attempt to bind her to you. If I find you have, you'll
regret it and she'll be samples and ash. Now get out." She bowed
acknowledgment of the orders, then departed quickly and quietly
rejoicing. Surra had a chance. She'd keep the cat alive in hopes
that somehow Surra could return to Storm. Behind her eyes Prauo was
there. *It is well, furless-sister. When the cat-one chooses to
wake I shall aid you to speak to her.* He gave the chiming sound
in her mind that was his mental chuckle. *Cat shall speak to cat.
I think all shall understand each other.* Laris found she too was
smiling as she went about readying the tigerbats. The performance
over, she changed to her oldest threadbare clothing and went to
look in on Surra. There was no change and Laris sighed. Her hand
went up to trace the tiny cat head on her ring. Somehow she felt
that it would bring them all luck. In the camps she'd learned
that luck often ruled lives. *But more often it is
determination that calls the luck, furless-sister. Be strong. I
sense a change approaching.* *What?* *I know not, but I feel
movement in the ways that govern lives.* He could explain no more
than that. Laris wasn't sure what it meant but if Prauo was sure
good might be coming, she'd hope along with him. She slept that
night more peacefully than in several nights. She was up early to
check the beasts. First those in open cages, then those in the
hidden ones. Hing and the babies greeted her happily. The babies
climbed about her person, exploring pockets in search of tidbits,
while Hing sat in Laris's lap, churring a meercat's sound of
pleasure as the girl scratched behind her ears. From the doorway Cregar
grinned as he entered. That widened to an honest smile as the
babies deserted Laris to rummage through his pockets and stand on
his shoulders chewing mouthfuls of his hair. He stroked and
scratched them as they churred approvingly. "Cute little lot." He sat,
his face blanking as he reached out mentally. The ability had
been mostly lost but he could still feel something occasionally.
It was what gave him hope his gifts were not gone forever. "Too
young yet to bond, but they will. A few months and they'll be
ready." He eyed her. "Stay away from them. No, I don't mean
physically," as she would have protested. "Feed and water them
but don't try to build any bond. I know Dedran will have warned
you." "He did." "Remember it." Cregar's
voice was quiet and very sober. "He's got high stakes riding on
this game. If you're the one to spoil it he'll see you pay, until
death would be a blessing, for you and your cat both." She
nodded. "Smart kid. Dedran needs you right now. If this works out
he may be moved on. Then your bond runs out and if you vanish
possibly no one will come looking. Dedran would never admit you'd
know enough to be a danger. Until then keep your head
down." Laris nodded again in
silence as Cregar gently detached the babies and left. It
bothered her how much the man saw. Had he guessed that she hoped
to help Surra, or her other plan to escape? *It's good advice for you. I
think he has come to it independently. He has grown to like you;
he does not like Dedran. It would amuse him to see that one fail
in some way, just so long as neither Dedran's wrath nor that of
his superiors falls on Cregar.* Quite a speech for Prauo, and
Laris took heed of it. The coyotes were still
angered: by abduction, confinement, and the loss of their own
human. She cared for them but made no further attempt to touch or
communicate with them apart from a few soothing murmurs. They sat
in a corner of the cage, eyes fixed on her, but made no
overtures. She could feel their anger and understood it. She did
her best to show in her movements that she meant no harm and
wished only to do her work. They accepted that, moving to the
cleaned part of the cage once she'd done the first half. When she
left they were lying together, eyes staring at the
walls. Surra was still motionless
in her hidden cage when Laris entered. *She lies,* Prauo sent
mentally. *She is awake and watching when you do not see. She
remembers your scent. She is clever this one. She has made her
kills and plans to live to make others. She is weak. She must
mend. Until then she will lie.* Laris smiled at the pun.
*Would she understand me?* *If I aid.* She moved up and dropped
into a sitting position beside the still form. Then she opened
her mind and reached out. At first she could feel nothing, only a
wall between herself and the animal. Then Prauo slipped into
link. Laris reached again. Now she could feel the glow of anger,
the pain of wounds, the sullen determination not to yield that
burned in the big cat. Prauo approved. In the back of the girl's
mind he anchored her thoughts, strengthening the thread she spun
out to touch. Cat eyes opened to study her. A thought formed
without words, an emotion then pictures. A query. *Why?* Laris could see
behind it the events. Logan falling, the stench of blood. Surra's
fury and her charge, and then red agony, blackness. There was
also a sense of disgust with herself. She was battle-wise, yet
she had forgotten this. Too long from the war-trail she had
reacted in rage when the human-friend had fallen. Storm would
have reprimanded her for her recklessness. Laris understood both
feelings and question. Patiently she strove to explain. She was
as much captive as Surra. She would help if she could. For now
the path the big cat had chosen was wise. Let old skills be
recalled. Let her lie, as a predator waits at the den-mouth for
prey. In time the prey will come out, the kill will be made, if
only one is patient long enough. Surra did not understand time as
humans did but still she asked a query which could have been
translated that way. Laris did not know. If they
waited it might be that another would find them. Free them both
and the team-friends with them. They must be patient. Over and
over she repeated that together with the picture of a cat which
waited. The prey came when the prey came. Who could set a limit
on that time? *Storm?* That picture was
powerful. A compound of scent, sight, touch, and emotion. It
could be expanded to mean: This one who is loved, trusted, who
leads. Who is also equal. Laris clutched the ring in one hand.
Then she gathered her will. *Storm searches for you.*
Agreement flowed between them. Surra knew. Storm would find the
path, follow it to trail's end, and none would turn him from
that. Surra would wait until she was strong again. All this time
she had lain limp, eyes shut. Now she opened them to stare up at
the human girl. Golden eyes, fierce and determined. Eyes without
the knowledge of surrender. And in that moment Laris
knew what she had done. Perhaps it had not been by her hand. But
she had stood by. If she continued to stand aside she would be
responsible for events she could not accept. There was no way she
could get word to Storm of where his and Laris's stolen beasts
were held. But when the time came—and she was sure it
would—she would be prepared. She felt
her decision weigh her down. She could die if she challenged
Dedran. Prauo could die. *I prefer to live,
furless-sister.* Prauo mind-sent in response to that thought.
*Let us continue to work to that end. Let the sick one sleep
again. And you also, you are tired.* That was the truth. Laris
stumbled to her bed and fell on it wearily. Yet somehow she felt
good. She had made a crucial decision herself, had not had one
forced on her by others. She belonged to herself still. It was a
warm feeling. She reveled in it as she fell into the
dark. Chapter
Twelve On Arzor Logan healed
slowly. The injuries had been severe and Arzor, like many of the
more rural settled worlds, had little of the faster-healing
technology. Storm fretted at the lack of news. Tani rode Destiny,
retreating more often to the healing calm of the desert fringe.
She was welcome in the camps of the Norbies. They knew her to be
clan-friend to the Djimbut Nitra. What was good enough for the
wild ones of the clans was better still for the civilized
clans. That she wore some of the
jewelry of a Thunder-talker was impressive. The items meant that
while she had not received the training, she had the potential.
Because of it she was welcomed also in the tents of the clan's
shamen. It did not hurt that none but she or Storm could ride
Destiny. The filly was three-quarters duocorn. She bonded to her
rider, accepting Storm as an extension of her human friend. She
had not yet accepted a stallion. It was hoped that when she did
she would produce colt foals. This day Tani had ridden
over to the Larkin ranch. Put Larkin had a small place on the
edge of the basin where he sent mares due to foal. They had
warmer weather and better feed than in the High Peaks, and cooler
temperatures and fewer predators than on the edge of the Big
Blue, as the main desert was known. Tani leaned on a fence with
the middle-aged man, Destiny standing hipshot behind her, and
admired the first of the still wobbly new foals. "From Fate?" Once she'd
taken Destiny and named her, Put had been amused enough to call
the filly's half-brother by a matching name. Put shook his head. "Nope, I
don't reckon he should be used until next season when he's rising
three. I used a crossbred colt I already had for the main herd.
It makes them half-bloods with him and the mares both being
half-duocorn. Enough to add that duocorn toughness. Not so much
they bond to one person only." He grinned at her. "Not saying
many riders wouldn't appreciate that. But it makes it hard for
some." Tani knew. Not everyone
wanted to teach her own mount. And what about those ranches which
needed their horses to be available to any who might need a
mount? "What about Fate and
Destiny's dams?" "Risked him there. Just two
mares wouldn't spoil him. They'll foal later. Should be
interesting to see what we get. But maybe I'll have to sell them
to riders as can do their own training. They'll be five-eighths
duocorn. They'll likely bond. Dumaroy's already interested." He
laughed softly. "That won't go down well with any Nitra horse
thieves. Mounts they can't ride and which could be too dangerous
to even try stealing." The girl agreed with that.
Her filly, Destiny, had killed two men thus far. One, a Nitra
who'd tried to ride her against her wishes. The other was one of
the clan camp raiders who'd run into Destiny in the dark and
struck out angrily to drive what he believed to be a loose horse
from his path. He hadn't lived long enough to scream. Tani lingered, talking
casually. It felt good to be here in the sunshine. She could feel
her shoulders relaxing from the tense hunch they'd been in. The
heat soaked through her. The foals' play made her smile. Later,
the feel of Destiny's powerful body under her made her sing as
they cantered for home. She missed Minou and Ferarre painfully
but she'd learned to live with the loss—for the moment. She returned to an
atmosphere which was tense but, as she realized in the first
minutes, with information, not danger. She looked at
Logan. "What is it?" "You know the raider ID came
from Trastor? And there was a suggestion from Mandy's imitation
of them that the raiders could be Baris and Ideena. Brightland
thought they might also be on their way to Trastor." He spun it
out and Tani squealed in mock rage. "Tell me!" "It seems that whatever else
may or may not be right, that last bit was. They've been seen and
positively ID'd there." She sucked in her breath.
"That's wonderful. It is—isn't it?" "Not quite," Brad said
heavily. "Trastor says that the pair have done nothing against
its laws. It won't pick them up, won't hold them, won't do
anything but question them politely if we insist on it." He
looked at her. "Now Terra's gone, most
planets won't let another world tell them what to do. If they
believe we're trying to give them orders they'll dig their toes
in and we'll learn nothing. What's more, it would put that pair
on their guard and almost everyone in authority against
us." Tani froze, her mind racing.
People might well feel that way and she could accept it. But this
world owed a debt. Trastor, where her father Bright Sky had died
helping the people escape the invading Xik. Where he was buried
with a memorial calling the whole planet to acknowledge the debt.
She straightened, her face shifting into almost feral lines. The
raiders had stolen Minou and Ferarre. They had tried to kill her
kin, abducted Storm's team. "The patrol officer, Versha?
She said you could go with her to Trastor. I shall go with you.
I'll talk to the government. I'll tell them what they owe my
blood. If they forget I'll remind them. Make a fuss,
Asizi. Just in the upper levels. Give them no time to
spread the news. We're to be told when we're a couple of hours
out from port." Her voice was crisp and Brad blinked. He hadn't known his
stepson's wife except as a nice young girl with beast master
potential who loved Storm. He'd known her courage but forgotten
that with her aunt and uncle she'd landed on many worlds. Often
it had been Tani's job to order and check supplies for her kin's
huge ship. To make plain to the suppliers that she would not be
cheated or ignored because of her youth. He was hearing the voice
she saved for such times and it startled him. Storm gave his stepfather
one of his rare smiles. "As Tani says. Tell the government we'd
like cooperation." His smile turned into an intent expression
signaling danger to any who saw it. "If they can't see their way
to that, I may find and speak to this Baris myself." Brad winced. Baris wasn't
likely to survive that experience intact and the Trastor
peacekeepers wouldn't approve. He said so, to receive in turn a
flat blank look. Right now Storm didn't give a damn. Nor did
Tani, or Logan—who was demanding to be permitted
passage as well. Brad turned to deal with that. "You still need to
rest." Logan eyed him. "I can. It's
two weeks to Trastor even on a patrol courier ship. I'll spend
the weeks taking it easy. By the time I arrive I'll be fit to get
about." He caught Tani's attention and looked imploringly at her;
he had no wish to remain behind but his father might object. Tani
understood his plea, responding by nudging Storm, who
nodded. "Let him come, Asizi.
He saw the raiders face-to-face. He can verify that under probe
if need be. If he identifies this Baris and Ideena we can put in
an arrest warrant with proof to hold them. Versha would back that
with patrol status. Once the patrol has them they'll probe. We
find what they did with Surra and the others. Logan files charges
of theft, assault, breaking and entering, and anything else we
can legitimately bring. We may find out then who took the beasts
and why. I doubt it was this pair—they seemed more interested in
loot. Maybe the third one who was with them was responsible. But
these two were only guns for hire, if what their world says is
correct." Brad threw up his hands.
"Who runs two ranches while you three go galloping off halfway
across the known worlds?" "You, the same as always,"
was his younger son's retort. Logan laughed. "I'm no use to you
in bed anyhow. Besides which, I ride for the rangers most of the
time. Kelson's the one complaining about my being useless right
now. By the time I get back I'll have recovered enough to start
riding again. As for Tani, did you ever seriously think Storm
would go alone when part of her team is out there somewhere as
well?" "Not really. All right. So I
don't get any work out of the three of you for several months.
You'd better come back in good health. I can't afford to hire new
hands." Tani saw beneath the assumed gruffness and flew to him,
hugging him hard. "Don't worry. We'll be fine.
I'll look after these two. They'll look after me. Was there any
more news or is that it?" "Not exactly news." He
turned to glance at Logan. "This is about that nice child from
the circus. I promised I'd see what I could find from the camps
about her." Logan looked up sharply.
"You found something?" "A few minor items. She came
from the De Pyall camp on Kowar. She was able to tell me
approximately the date she was transported there. I checked
incoming traffic for that time frame. She got there on the old
Sally Ann, and I managed to connect to the captain. Still
the same man and he has records. Not great ones but enough to say
that the load she came in with were from the main De Pyall camp
on Meril as she'd thought." Brad snorted. "He copied me everything he
had and you've never read such a mess. Barely half on computer,
the rest on paper with portions crossed out, written over, then
written over again. I've accessed those lists for Meril though.
They have her on one. No real information. Still alone. No record
of where she came from to Meril. I think she said her mother died
at a camp farther back. But they do have the girl listed quite
clearly on Meril. Somehow they lost most of the name in the next
transit. She's only listed as 'Laris' on Kowar. But for Meril
she's Shallaris Trehannan." "Sounds like an English
name," Tani commented. "The Trehannan bit anyhow." "So I think. But Meril is
quite sure that none of those refugees came from Terra. Which may
mean either her family had lived elsewhere for a while, or that
she'd been transferred in from yet another of the camps. Since
she's sure she started out with her mother, there must have been
at least one previous move. I think there may have been a number.
They seem to have shuttled some of those poor damned refugees all
over half the systems during the war." His face went
bleak. "If the circus is there when
you arrive, let the child know what we have so far. It must be
hard for the girl not to even know her full name. Tell her I plan
to keep digging." Unspoken was the thought in all of their minds.
It would help Brad to keep his mind occupied while the rest of
his family followed another trail. "I can let her know about
the name," Logan offered. "It won't be too exhausting for a poor
invalid." His brother snorted. "I'm
sure it won't." Logan flushed then grinned. "So I'd like to see her
again. No crime." Storm's eyes were kind. "No
crime at all. She may even have seen something. After all, a
circus uses animals. It's possible someone could have approached
them offering to sell beasts. See if Laris has heard
anything." Brad spoke quietly. "If you
do ask, do it without anyone else hearing, son. I didn't take to
that boss of hers. I'd say he wasn't the most honest man around.
I doubt he'd take openly stolen beasts to use. Too much trouble
could come of it. But I suspect a couple of those tigerbats of
his may not be completely legal. They were all but wiped out on
Lereyne. Since they've been preserving them in special reserves
this last five years the bats are banned from being taken
off-planet." Logan looked puzzled.
"So?" "So Laris mentioned that the
two females aren't related to the other three. They're only about
two years old as well. He might just have bought them from a
reserve or some private collector on a different world. But it's
in my mind he could also have had them smuggled from Lereyne.
There'd be plenty of collectors who'd be ready to sign fake
papers for a price. But two unrelated females—they'd spread the gene pool, breed
far better. Tigerbats are becoming so rare now that any he breeds
would sell for high prices on several worlds with arenas we could
all name." Tani was thoughtful. "That's
true. We could also have Versha talk to Lereyne wildlife officers
about that. Lereyne may have some way of telling whether the two
young ones were born there. If so maybe I can get Laris to take
blood or tissue samples. If we prove the bats were smuggled then
Lereyne will apply for their return. If they fine Dedran they
might be able to confiscate the other three tigerbats as the
fine. I think Laris would like that. She doesn't like them being
in the circus. She says they aren't really happy
there." "Sounds like a possibility.
All right. You three start to get ready. Versha commed while Tani
was gone. She'll pick up any who are leaving at around nine-hour.
Get moving. You don't have that much time if you want to eat,
pack, and sleep before she arrives." They scattered at
once. Versha was on time, her
teeth showing white against the dark skin as her face broke into
a grim smile. "All three of you. I expected that. I heard the
Trastorian authorities were being difficult but there's ways
around that if you know the right people." She grinned with
wicked amusement. "I've talked to the patrol
officer on Trastor. Jared trained with me until he transferred to
the patrol. He confirms that the raider pair were seen again only
a few hours ago. He's arranged a stop on their own personal IDs.
If they try to board a passenger ship they'll be very politely
turned away. I've taken a precaution or two myself. He's also
identified their own ship. It looks as if they may be staying on
Trastor a while." Her smile broadened. "Oh?" Logan grinned
back. "Oh, yes. We don't want to
spook the game before we reach them. But he's arranged a small
party if it looks like they're planning to up-ship before we
reach Trastor. After all, they have the ship registered under a
false ID. And guess what?" She surveyed three amused faces. Storm
was the first to reply. "You've tied in the fake ID
with some complaint." "Exactly. So until they can
prove that the ship the complaint is listed against is not their
ship, then they stay right where they are." "Won't they realize that
it's a setup?" Logan queried. "Possibly. But they may also
assume that old enemies have caught up. Gods know they have them
if Brightland speaks true. The Trastor broker could have sold
them a fake ID to achieve just this. He'd deny it either way and
once he hears about this mess—and Jared has arranged that the
broker will hear first—he'll vanish anyway. We have a
front-man making the very serious and convincing complaint. It
can be tied in via Meril and if they get that far, to criminal
figures from Bright-land." Versha chuckled richly. "By the time they've
unraveled that rat's nest, talked to Trastor, Meril, and
Brightland, found no one there is involved—that will acknowledge it or help
them very much, and then traced back our front-man to Trastor
again. We could have had enough time to arrive, decide the
meaning of life, and arrive back on Arzor lifting on a ship
traveling solely by pedal-power. Believe me. They won't up-ship
until the patrol says so." By now all four were
grinning. It was bad enough trying to trace an error through the
bureaucracy of one planet. Trying to sort out a mistake through
the red tape of several was the sort of thing which sent the
would-be tracer completely crazy. Experienced bureaucrats had
even been known to turn green and resign on the spot at the
suggestion. The usual method was to come to an agreement with
one's opposite number. Cut out the whole loop and start again.
Except that for civilians with suspicious antecedents this wasn't
an option. Storm had been thinking. If
it was his problem he might just decide to act like a pirate. Cut
out the loop, not in records but in real life. He hoped Versha
had thought of that. Better to ask and find she had, than not ask
and discover the raider ship had quietly vanished from under the
authorities' noses. He asked. "Hmmmm. You and I would
think that way. Jared's a good man. But he's never been in the
field. His whole career's had him flying a desk. I never thought
to mention that chance. I'll check he's taken precautions. Boot
up the com for me while I get the code settings." Versha was back quickly,
taking over the seat Tani swiveled toward her. "Thanks." She
flicked a dial, moved a switch carefully, then spoke quietly. It
seemed little time before a slow voice answered. "Patrol Office, Trastor
sector. Jared Anwar speaking. That you, Versha?" "It's me. Listen, there is
no time to waste. Have you done anything physically to see the
ship we're interested in doesn't lift?" "Physically?" The slow voice
sounded startled. "But there's an injunction against departure on
the ship." "The owners don't seem to be
the types to necessarily obey court orders. If they lift and
clear Trastor how do you make them come back?" "Why, I ... well ... I
suppose we ... Um. Versha, have you any reason to think they
could try that?" "Only that they're wanted on
three worlds including their own under their real names. They've
had charges filed for everything from piracy in the space-lanes
to assaulting a spaceport official on Aubeare." Jared was diverted. "Why did
they assault the official there?" "I gather he wanted them to
file flight reports from their last couple of stops and as that
isn't normally a legal requirement, they didn't see why they
should. He tried to prevent them leaving so Baris shoved him down
the ship's ramp." "That's hardly a major
offense." "It can be on Aubeare; most
of their officials are minor members of the royal family. But
take a look at a few of the other charges. I've just spacegrammed
a list. I think you'd better take precautions, Jared. If that
ship vanishes, we may lose our best hope in years of getting a
line into some of the crime the patrol's been investigating since
the Xiks pulled their heads in. If that happens I can name you a
whole list of our superiors who won't be happy about
it." There was a thoughtful
silence. Then—"Just a minute." His voice was
raised in a shout. "Namor, in here." After that they caught
scraps of brisk orders being issued. Jared returned. "How much
force is reasonable?" "As much as you have to use.
Try to keep that precious pair alive. They won't do much talking
dead. But if it's the life of one of your people or theirs, then
shoot and we can hold a post mortem later." There was a moan at the pun.
"You owe me a round of drinks to wash that down. All right. I'll
put Jola in where she can overlook the ship." "I want it stopped, not
watched as it leaves." "Oh, don't worry about that.
She'll have a scramble-laser. One good burst in the right place,
the ship's navcomp is wiped, and emergency set-down is
instigated. It can't lift again until the navcomp is
recalibrated. Those old-fashioned ships don't have shielding
against a well-aimed scramble-laser. Jola's the lady to do it
too. She was one of the Trastor's best first-in commando fighters
until the Xiks quit." Versha's tone was envious.
"Just how do you rate a scramble-laser?" "Heh, she liberated it from
the Xiks before they pulled back. I slapped a requisition order
on it when she joined. Officially it's both her own personal
property and ours on permanent lease. That way it can't be taken
off us, it belongs to her." "And it can't be taken off a
civilian because it's leased by a secure department," Versha
finished. "Smart! If you run into any other civilians with a
scramble-laser and an urge to travel, let me know." "Will do. Now, I'd better
have a word with my peacekeeper opposite. If we end up making a
shambles of his area I'm sure he'll like to know why in
advance." "No!" Versha spoke sharply.
"The pair have friends. They weren't doing this on their own. Our
superior says keep events under your hat. We don't know who might
be involved in planetary circles. You say nothing. If you have to
kill this pair you refer him to me and say nothing until I
arrive. I'm bringing people in to file official charges on
Trastor." "They won't listen to
off-planet civilians." "They'll listen to these.
Get on with it, Jared. If you lose that duo our superiors may
have my head on the block, but they'll have yours first and for
sure. Versha out." She flicked a dial and the humming died. Logan
stood carefully. "Twelve days until we know
if he managed to hang on to them. I plan to spend the time
sleeping, eating, and exercising. Let me know when it's
dinnertime. I'll start with that." Storm nodded. "I hope Jared
can hang on to the ship." Tani turned to Versha.
"About Baris and Ideena. I suppose no captain on a passenger ship
would go against a patrol warning. How certain is it that the
pair can't hop a cargo ship if the captain takes a
bribe?" Versha developed a wicked
look. "Oh, fairly certain, I think. I had a confidential notice
circulated, saying that the patrol discovered a pirate group has
been getting spies aboard cargo ships. The spies either try to
get a look around at defenses and cargos, or try to persuade
captains or other officers into shipping them illegally. It is
suspected they then help the pirates to take the ship and dispose
of the crew." She smirked. "There's a very clear
description of Baris and Ideena included in the notice as
possible suspects, and Jared's people will be ensuring every
cargo ship arriving on Trastor receives that information. Under
the circumstances I doubt any captain or officer, no matter how
greedy, is going to touch that pair with a very long pole. But he
isn't likely to say why either if it makes a pirate group mad at
him personally. He'll come up with something moderately
believable and wish them happy voyaging—with some other ship.
Well?" Tani was giggling and even
Storm was smiling a little. "I'd give a lot to be there listening
to any of that," Tani assured her. "I think you have it covered.
But it's still going to be a long trip." It was, but even the longest
trip doesn't last forever. Twelve days after that
conversation they were two hours out of Trastor's main port
and signaling their arrival. From there they could also
pick up Brad Quade's discussion with the peacekeepers. Before
that became bogged down in refusals to act against the Lady
Ideena or Baris, Brad mentioned that incoming on an official
patrol vessel two hours out was Tani, daughter of Bright Sky, the
savior of Trastor. Tani believed she had suffered personal hurt
from this pair the peacekeepers were trying to protect. The
discussion and protection reversed abruptly. Chapter
Thirteen There was a small
committee—one man and his
assistant—waiting to greet Tani when the
patrol ship set down. As Brad had requested, it was not
ostentatious, nor had information of her arrival been given to
the press. Versha left her ship first and took up a position
which made it plain she was acting as a guard. Then Tani walked
down the ramp flanked by Storm and Logan, each a half-pace behind
her. "Gracious Lady, Trastor
welcomes the daughter of Bright Sky, savior of Trastor." The
welcoming official was a small man of innocuous appearance. From
an angle where he could not see what she did, Versha's hands flew
in the hand-signs used for communication between settlers and
natives on Arzor. "Cunning, do not
underestimate, this one is an important man." Without turning his head the
small man suddenly grinned. "Thank you, Officer." His attention
returned to Tani, his eyes studying her. He nodded once to
himself and offered her a slight bow. "Let me stop being polite
and start being cunning. This way." He ushered her to a
comfortable hovercar, saw to the safe seating of the other three,
then signaled to the assistant to drive. They moved off and the
man spoke quietly. "I am Under-governor
Larash-Ti-Andresson. My friends call me Anders. I hope you will
be friends. You would not know this, Bright Sky-Ti-Tani, but I
was one of the people your father saved. Later, if it is your
pleasure, I will take you to his memorial." He spoke almost
lightly but both Tani and Storm could sense the very real emotion
beneath the words. This man, whoever or whatever else he might
be, did indeed remember and honor the man who died helping to
free Trastor from the enemy. "I have reviewed what
information I have received so far," Anders continued quietly. "I
will summarize. Patrol Officer Versha has requested we take into
custody two citizens of the planet Brightland. These two, a Lady
Ideena and a man named Baris, are at present on Trastor. They
arrived openly, appear to have money, and own their own ship."
His lips quirked. "It may be a rather shabby and obsolete model
but it does belong to them. It is in spaceworthy condition and
carries all emergency beacons and supplies mandated by
law. "They have committed no
known felonies here, nor have any complaints been made against
them by citizens of Trastor. Apart from this we have received no
warrants against them for offenses committed on other worlds
which we would recognize as—to use the old term—extraditable. However I am told
they have committed crimes against you personally. You are here
to make a formal complaint and request that we act as Versha
asks. That we take these people into custody and question them
rigorously. Is this correct?" Tani simply
nodded. "But an ordinary complaint
about something which occurred on another world does not carry
over to ours," Anders said gently. Tani met his gaze. "This
does," she said flatly. "I am here as a representative of the
Nitra on Arzor. Patrol Officer Versha is present to verify my
complaint. I charge the people known as Baris and Lady Ideena
with attempted insurrection of a native race against the humans
of a 'settled world.' On behalf of the Nitra I charge theft of
sacred items which I can identify." She could see that Anders
suddenly looked grave, as well he might. It was one of the few
charges which could and did carry over to another world. No world
with a native race wanted some fool out there starting a holy war
against the humans. Still less did they wish the other nonhuman
races with whom they allied to think that Terrans did not take
such a complaint seriously. Anders opened his mouth and Storm cut
in. "I am here as a
representative of the beast masters unit in which I held a
commission. This may be verified on application to High Command.
They stand prepared. I charge those known as Baris and Lady
Ideena with acts of sabotage against a unit of the Terran
Command. In the course of which acts they injured a civilian,
committed theft and damage of property, and violated port safety
regulations. The government of Arzor has filed charges over the
latter. I carry the warrants for those and can produce them on
request." "Beast master unit? Terran
High Command?" Anders's voice was horrified. Storm descended from
the harsh emotionless attitude he'd assumed to impress the
Under-governor. "Anders." He leaned forward.
"That pair attacked a clan camp twice. They stole some jewelry
from the female shaman they'd stunned. The Nitra are leaving it
to Tani to sort out—for the moment. She's a
clan-friend." "Isn't that
unusual?" "She's only the second in
Arzor's history," Storm said tersely. "But the Nitra want
satisfaction. They want the jewelry returned with Tani and the
thieves provably punished. They'll settle for the thieves but not
the sacred items alone." "In other words they want
satisfaction." "Yes. As to the other
charge, that could become worse. You had a beast master living
here. Yes, I know he's dead," he added before Anders could
interrupt. "We have reason to think this pair may have been
involved with that death, or know who was. Listen." He spoke
slowly as the hovercar floated silently along the path toward a
series of office buildings. It halted as Storm finished speaking.
Anders exited the car and found Logan at his side. The young man
spoke very quietly and seriously. "Anders, you said no
complaint from a citizen had been received." He took a breath.
"But isn't Tani an honorary citizen of Trastor? I'm sure her Aunt
Kady said so once." The Under-governor eyed him.
"That is so. We decreed that Bright Sky was a citizen of our
world. It was a posthumous citizenship but you're correct. It
descends by law to any child of his living at the time it was
granted. It also gives me an unimpeachable reason to act." He
waved the others to join them, sweeping them with him to a large
office. There he sat and reached for a control panel. Into the
speaker above that, he snapped a string of brisk orders as he
switched from office to office. Then he looked at the
four. "That will set things in
motion. Officer, you have had your people here see to it that the
criminals do not depart unexpectedly." Versha smiled. "Oh, I think
they'll still be around." "So do I," Anders said
dryly. "That was a statement, not a question. I've heard
something about a complaint against a ship which may or may not
be correctly identified. I've also heard about pirates." He
leaned to the speaker panel and called for refreshments, then sat
back. "Let us wait in comfort while we see if my preliminary
endeavors bear fruit." He looked at Tani. "Do I gather two of the
stolen beasts are yours? Are you also a beast master?" "I was never trained. But
yes, I have the gifts and the coyotes are part of my
team." "If you are not officially a
beast master how do you come to have Terran animals?" Tani settled back. "I am the
niece of Brion and Kady Carraldo." She saw his look of
half-recognition and continued. "I grew up on their interstellar
ark working with animals and helping the scientists and my kin
there." The Under-governor's memory
released the information that had been teasing him and the back
of his neck went cold. Lord of Light! The ark was an invaluable
resource for every human-settled world. It was run and ruled by
scientists, but he guessed that scientific detachment did not
apply where it came to this girl if they thought Trastor was
ill-treating her. They might continue to assist Trastor, but
there were many ways in which they could deny a world what it
needed without appearing to flatly reject official
requests. Tani would not have dreamed
of using that power, nor would her aunt and uncle have considered
it. She did not even see the way Anders might be thinking. Storm
did, but said nothing. If a man thought that way you wouldn't
change his mind-set by arguing. If Anders believed that helping
Tani and laying hands on Baris and Ideena would keep Trastor in
credit with the ark, let him. He'd make sure Brion and Kady heard
of the man's help. How they reacted was up to them. Anders stood. "Please excuse
me for a time. There are certain things I must do. The burdens of
government." He chuckled a little and left. Versha stared after him.
"Not the fool he looks even if he was jumping to a few
conclusions there at the end." She dug a small comunit out of her
pocket and spun dials. "Jared?" "Jared here, Versha, where
the Hades are you and what have you stirred up? Every
peacekeeper, port official, and security beat-walker is out
buzzing around. There's a hunt for our two like you wouldn't
believe." "Yes I would. Never mind
that right now. Tell me everything you know about a man called
'Under-governor Larash-Ti-Andresson. My friends call me Anders.'
Small man. Looks meek and mild, rather harmless. Until you say
something important and see his eyes." She heard a sort of gulp
over the com. "Andresson? Oh, he's Under-governor all right. He
runs the security for Trastor. Peacekeepers, port police, private
guards, spies, anyone at all in those categories. He deals with
anything that may imperil Trastor's safety, autonomy, or internal
security. He isn't always soft-handed about how he does that
either. But he's honest and he's very good at what he does.
Particularly if he thinks what he does will help Trastor. He can
be ruthless but he's a patriot. To him Trastor is first in
importance, and other planets are nothing in
comparison." "Thanks. I think we've
convinced him it's in Trastor's interest to help us. Don't go
against him. But try to see that Baris and Ideena stay alive if
that's possible. Versha out." She snapped the comunit off
and tucked it away again. "You heard that, Anders? You can come
back now." The man who returned was the same until you saw his
face with the meek mask of minor officialdom removed. His gait
was firmly confident. His eyes showed a hard humor and wary
intelligence. "You knew." "As you
intended." "Only if you were bright
enough." "Take it that I am," Versha
requested. "And now that we both know who's who and what's what,
how is the hunt going?" "Mixed. They got to that
ship of theirs. They started to lift and at a thousand feet
someone hit them with a scramble-laser. Would you know anything
about that, Patrol Officer?" Versha out-stared him. "I see." He
continued. "Their navcomp emergency
system seems to have been ingeniously programmed. Instead of
setting down right where they'd lifted, it swung the ship and
landed in the next clear area. That turned out to be a park
twenty klicks from the port—that's about fifteen of your
Arzoran miles," he added for clarification. "No one was prepared
for that trick. By the time my people reached the spot whoever
had been in the ship had vanished again. We're questioning
everyone in the area but there's no information coming in as
yet." He frowned. "Have they
allies here, do you know? Anyone who might help them to hide or
escape?" Versha pursed her lips.
"When they hit Arzor they had someone with them. Logan here never
saw him, but Tani can verify that there were three people,
believed at the time to be innocent tourists, whom the clan
permitted to escape. We know three people also fled Arzor on that
ship. So yes, they do have a colleague of some kind. Whether he's
still here, who he is, or if he'd help, we don't know. But it's
possible. Ideena isn't likely to stop at blackmail to get under
cover." Anders smiled dangerously.
"We'll keep looking. Sooner or later someone will come trotting
in to say that their neighbor is behaving strangely. Until then
I'll make it clear to all the usual riffraff that it will not be
business as usual. Not until I lay hands on this pair. Set scum
to catch scum. The locals won't like having my men poking into
every corner of their business. After a while when we don't let
up they'll begin hunting for the pair themselves." "But will they hand them
over in shape to talk?" Logan spoke for the first time since
they'd arrived in the office. Anders nodded at him with
respect. "They will if I make it clear that if our duo aren't
alive I'll assume someone had something to hide and look even
longer and harder." He straightened, stretching. "It's likely to
take time though. Are you hosting your friends here,
Officer?" Versha glanced at her
companions. "I think so. The patrol do have a suite for visiting
VIPs. They can stay there until you want to talk again or there's
news." "It may not take long." His
look was grim. "On Trastor it isn't easy to hide when I'm the one
who hunts. We should have Baris and Ideena in a few hours, a
couple of days at the most." It was as well he'd taken no
bets on that. Ten days later Baris and Ideena might as well have
vanished tracelessly into a black hole and Under-governor
Larash-Ti-Andresson was not a happy man. Nor was Baris. He'd returned
abruptly from a card game in which he'd been winning. His boots
clattered up the ship's ramp and he'd yelled his partner's name
in tones which could peel paint at ten paces. "Ideena?
Ideena!" "For Ghesh's sake. What is
it?" "We're wanted." Ideena raised an eyebrow.
"That's so unusual?" "Not what, who," Baris
snapped, confusing her. She stared. "Who? What? What
the Crats are you talking about, you idiot? Make
sense." "That cursed Andresson has
every peaceman out asking for us. We're wanted for questioning on
interplanetary charges. If his people take us they can legally
use deep-probe on charges like that. I'm getting out and I'm
getting out right now! You can please yourself." He dived for the
control room and Ideena followed. "They have an
injunction..." "They can stick their
injunction." "That's the patrol you're
talking about. They may have it backed by something," Ideena
warned. She moved into the seat next to his, strapping down
swiftly. "I'll take my chances. I
want out of here." Since that applied to Ideena as well, she said
no more. Baris's hands raced across the controls, programming the
navcomp and firing up the engines. Then he applied thrust. By now
the port control office was uttering a string of threats and
warnings. The chant grew louder and more indignant as the small
ship began to rise. "...subject to penalties
under law of not less than half the value of any cargo, and
pending decision on value to be levied against the offending
ship..." Baris slammed a hand down and the indignant voice faded
as the ship rose. "We did it," Ideena yelped.
The ship shivered. The navcomp emitted an almost human groan and
every light it had began to flash. From the panel behind it a
voice alarm sounded. "WARNING. WARNING. SET-DOWN
ACTIVATED. NAVCOMP UNCALIBRATED. WARNING. WARNING. SET-DOWN
ACTIVATED." "What?..." Baris was working furiously.
He spared her a glance, his eyes half crazed with fury and
terror. "A Ghesh-damned scramble-laser. They used a
scramble-laser on us." "Can they do
that?" "They just did. Shut up. I
programmed something into the system they won't be expecting. I'm
pushing the boundaries on that as hard as I can." He peered into
a viewer. "We're landing about twenty klicks from the port. In
some park. There're a lot of ornamental bushes dotted around.
Grab what you want and as soon as we're down and the ramp drops,
run like hell. The bushes will help to hide which way we go. With
luck the probies will be caught on their heels for a few minutes.
If we move fast enough we can get clear." The ship was sitting on
her tail, descending in a controlled emergency landing and
steering with the small side jets. Ideena leapt across the
control room, grabbing for emergency stashes of her
loot. "We can go to the circus.
Dedran will take us in. If he doesn't and we're probed there's
too much we could tell security about him." Baris showed his teeth. "I
know. Get the other two sets of fake ID. And anything light
that's worth credits." "Teach your grandmother to
suck eggs. You get every weapon we can carry. Dedran may have
other ideas about helping." By now both were stuffing pockets,
shoulder bags, and the front of tunics. The ship's alarm was
announcing that it was thirty seconds to emergency set-down.
Baris hit the drop-ramp button, then, when it refused to obey,
the override. The ramp dropped just as the ship settled. There
was a grating sound as the ramp hit the ground and buckled. Both
ignored it to race for the exit. Ideena fumbled hovercab
tokens from her pocket as they reached a line of the small
robot-controlled vehicles on the far side of the park. Credits
could be used but those who wished to use the cabs extensively
during a visit often bought the tokens. They were in clearplas
and weighed almost nothing. Nor could you spend them by mistake
and find the cab refusing to accept larger amounts in notes.
Thanking fortune she'd still a number of the tokens left, Ideena
dug them from her pocket in readiness. They fell into the
backseat and the door hissed shut. The hovercab spoke in a flat
polite voice. "Where to, noble visitors?" "To the Algona
building." "Two credits." She pushed the token through
the slot and leaned back. Baris started to question her choice of
destination but she waved him to silence. They arrived at the
building. Ideena cleared her throat and stayed put. The cab spoke
again. "This is your destination as
requested. Do you have another?" "Yes. Go to the Sharme
intersection. Wait one half-hour for us. If we do not meet you in
that time you are no longer required." "That will be six credits,
noble visitors." Ideena fed in the last of the tokens and hauled
a bewildered Baris out the door. They watched the hovercab glide
away as Ideena held her partner on the sidewalk. She spoke
quietly. "Those cabs are probably
fitted with cameras. Andresson will be able to trace us here but
not yet. The only way he can speed up getting that cab back is an
emergency recall. And by the time he decides on that the cab's
likely to be at Sharme. I packed disguises. We change here, walk
several miles, and take another hover to Dedran." Baris's look was sour.
"They'll have cameras all over this building too, won't
they?" "Oh, yes." For the first
time since Baris had burst into their ship, Ideena grinned. "I
have an answer for those." She produced two small gadgets from
her bag and turned, staring at the crowd. "I picked this up on
Yohal a while back." She focused her gaze on two people moving
toward them. "That pair look suitable." The pair noticed were a tall
thin male with an equally thin woman by his side. They were rapt
in contemplation of each other and clearly unnoticing anything
else. Ideena raised the first gadget and within it, there was a
tiny humming. She opened it, removed the cassette, and placed it
in the second small flat box. A tiny red light glowed
momentarily. Ideena lifted the box to fit under a strap on her
shoulder. "Walk right beside me. Don't
move away. The machine projects a holographic picture over us of
the two I imaged. So long as we're within a couple of feet of
each other all the cameras will see in here are those two." Baris
eyed her with admiration. Trust Ideena to come up with something
like that, it was one of the reasons he stayed with her,
dominating as she was. He took her arm and walked
with her to the public bathrooms many large public buildings had
on Trastor. There she entered, giggling wordlessly, with him in
tow. She dropped a credit in the slot, dropped a towel over the
camera, and signaled him to remain silent. Mutely she laid out
disguises and they donned them with the quick ease of long
practice. Baris produced a tiny pocket scriber and wrote
swiftly. "Won't they wonder why we
blinded the camera?" In reply she let out a yelp
then a squeal. She opened her mouth and panted in a series of
ascending gasps of apparent excited pleasure. Baris laughed and
joined in. It was the perfect cover. Of course. They were merely
two citizens in love and with no time to waste returning to
wherever they lived. They kept up the pretense for long enough to
be convincing. Then they exited using Ideena's box to foil the
lobby cameras. Once in the street she shut off the box and they
walked... ...No longer Baris and the
Lady Ideena. Now they were an older man with his young son. Even
Ideena's walk had changed, to the cocky swagger of a boy in his
mid-teens. Baris became a more ponderous walker, a man of
substance both financial and physical; an aging man who had never
had to exert himself and whose reflexes had long since slowed.
They took a hovercab in the direction of the circus. Several
streets away they left the cab and strolled, two in a crowd, all
heading for Trastor's newest attraction. There were guards at the
circus gates. Baris slowed. "Do we risk
it?" "No choice," Ideena hissed
back. "We need to get under cover. Take your time. We'll look
around the cages first. With good luck we'll see Dedran or Cregar
without having to ask for them." They strolled, Ideena in
character as a bored boy trying to pretend he was enjoying the
treat his father had offered, Baris as the equally bored father
only too happy that his lad was enjoying the show. From the
corner of his eye Baris saw a familiar figure. His hand tightened
on her arm and she turned casually to follow his
stare. Cregar was checking guard
shields and locks on the cages. There was always some stupid
child left unwatched who'd try to approach the cage front or
sneak in the back to enter and pet the pretty animals. Most of
the pretty animals would be delighted, some because they enjoyed
being petted, others because they could always use an extra
snack. He checked the next lock and held himself from a betraying
movement as he felt someone approaching. A voice spoke very
softly behind him. "Don't turn around. This is
Baris and Ideena. We're wanted. Ideena thinks it's about our raid
on Arzor. Tell Dedran he gets us under cover or the probies have
us and we talk our heads off. He'd better decide fast, they won't
be far behind." Cregar thought quickly.
"Stroll about. I'll find Dedran. We'll slip you into the alley
between cage rows. There're places there we can keep you where
even the probies won't find a thing." He turned, looked at them
briefly, and slid into the crowd. He was back in five minutes
with the worried-looking circus boss. Ten minutes later the
fugitives were lodged undetectably if not comfortably in the
secret part of the largest cage. Cregar and Dedran had talked and
Dedran was both alarmed and furious but he hid his emotions from
the fugitives. There would always be another time to act. For now
he would have to wait and see what sort of a storm this stupid
pair had raised. If it was too dangerous there were always
options. Chapter
Fourteen Inside the circus
Laris heard nothing of the fugitives' arrival until Dedran
sought her out. "The largest hidden place," he snapped at her.
"It has occupants. Take them a jug of the local cider and see
that it's cut with about half juice. I won't risk them getting
drunk." Laris snorted, "They'd find
it impossible to get drunk on that stuff without juice
added. And what if whoever it is blames me?" Dedran's face was grim.
"Tell them it's my order. Don't waste time, girl. Get moving and
come straight back. I want to go over changes in the order of
tonight's acts." He strode away as Laris
headed for the tent which held food and drink for the circus
staff. She half filled a large lidded jug with the local cider
and topped it off with a tart thirst-quenching fruit juice. She
was wondering who Dedran had hidden. Cregar was nearby as she
slipped down the alley behind the cages. He nodded once to her
and went back to his work, which appeared to consist of polishing
cage locks. Laris wondered about that, then thought perhaps he
was checking security and seeing that no one followed her to the
hidden room. She opened the door with
care, climbed in, and placed the jug on a small ledge. It was
darker inside where the bright sun did not penetrate so her
vision was blurred. She spoke quietly to the dim shape which
lounged against the wall. "I have brought you cider
and fruit juice to drink. Dedran says it is by his orders." She
moved to leave and was caught by the arm. A half-familiar female voice
purred softly. "Was it indeed?" A second shape moved up; as
Laris's eyes acclimated to the dimness she stared and bit down
fear. The speaker was Ideena with Baris behind her, and they
looked unpleasantly pleased to see her. "I don't much care for fruit
juice," Baris said softly. "I'd prefer Fever brandy, wouldn't
you, Ideena?" "Much better than fruit
juice," came the sweet agreement. Laris twisted. "Dedran
expects me back at once. He wants to discuss tonight's
acts." "Oh, but we'd rather you got
us brandy. We're even prepared to give you a couple of credits
and you can keep the change." "Dedran—" "Can wait while you go and
buy us what we want." Baris took a firmer grip on her wrist. "Do
you hear me? I want brandy!" His fingers dug into a bruise the
girl had received earlier and Laris squealed at the sharp
pain. Cregar thrust his head in
and scowled. "Never mind wasting time here, girl. Dedran's
expecting you." "Maybe we'd like her to
stay?" Ideena's voice was half-questioning. "And maybe we have work for
her," Cregar said, looking at the woman. "There's an old saying:
Offend not the host in his home." Ideena pouted but nodded to the
man. Baris released his grip sullenly. He reached for the jug,
drank, and spat in outrage. "Fruit juice! Tell Dedran we
want something drinkable. Merilian wine, even the wine they make
here is drinkable. Anything but Ghesh-damned fruit juice. There's
no kick in that for a man." Laris scrambled out of the
cage and left Cregar to discuss that subject. She wanted to be
far away from the fugitive pair. If Cregar hadn't come when he
did she had a feeling Baris would have started slapping her. And
why had he come? How had he been about just when she
needed him? She didn't know. She'd just be grateful he had been,
and she hoped he'd be there if she had to tend that pair again.
Behind her Cregar was speaking very quietly. "Lay off the kid. She
belongs to Dedran. She does a good job for the circus too. She's
in four acts; Dedran won't be at all happy if she can't perform."
His gaze became threatening. "Besides, she's not a bad kid. You
start upsetting her and I might just take a hand. I haven't got a
lot of time for your kind." "Is that supposed to scare
us?" Baris sneered. Cregar said nothing. He simply stood there
holding the man's gaze with his own until the larger man dropped
his eyes. Cregar left. Baris made a
spitting motion, then looked at Ideena. "No one talks to me like
that. There's always another day and next time it'll be my
turn." Ideena was thoughtful. "Yes.
But not yet. First we need to get off this planet. The best way
would be with our ship. I don't want to go back to finding
another and fixing it up. Not if we can get this one back." She
remembered the filthy jobs they'd had to take to afford even the
shabby, decommissioned old patrol courier ship. It wasn't the
killings she'd minded, nor the easier robberies. It was working
for people who'd given the orders and treated her and Baris as if
they were something scraped from a gutter. She didn't want to do all
that again. It was a pity they hadn't had a good chance at Cregar
once they'd lifted from Arzor. But the man was cunning. Maybe now
was a better time. Baris wasn't much for planning but he
sometimes had ideas. She opened the discussion and waited to hear
if this was one of those times. They settled to making plans as
outside Laris was trotting for Dedran's office. He looked up as
she entered. "Where have you
been?" "Baris tried to make me stay
with them." Laris hoped that a few words would convey more. It
seemed to. Dedran's eyes went hard. "What happened?" That was
easy. She explained what the pair had said and done. Then that
Cregar had come by, heard her cry out, and intervened. She
exhibited the bruised wrist. "He stayed?" was Dedran's
question. "I think so. I heard him
talking as I left." Dedran grunted. "Humph. Very
well. I may have to speak to them if Cregar hasn't made it plain
that I hire you to work with the animals. They don't qualify."
Laris giggled and he shot her a look then half-smiled
reluctantly. "They don't qualify as circus animals. Now, tonight
we have some of the local VIPs attending. I want to shift the
carra act..." They got on with work. Later, after the show,
Dedran found his man. "What happened with that pair and the
girl?" Cregar was terse and the language he used was explicit.
His boss frowned. "They're a risk. We may have to do something
about that." "All you have to do is say
the word." "Not yet. That could be a
risk as well. I'll let you know." "Want me to keep an eye on
the kid? If they start anything with her and she screams there
could be some outsider to hear and ask questions. That
Ghesh-damned Anders has the whole city filled with spies. Baris
plays some very unpleasant games I've heard, and anyway, if they
rough the girl up too badly she can't work. She could even run
away if they hurt or scare her too much. You don't want to risk
any of that." Dedran pursed his thin lips.
"No, I don't. All right. Stick around anytime she's with them.
I'll tell her she's to let you know beforehand." He changed the
subject. "What about those beasts? The girl says the small ones
are fine and quite friendly but the other two won't cooperate and
the big one is still very sick." "She's telling the truth.
The meercats are friendly." He felt a warmth as he remembered how
the small group welcomed him. The babies climbing his clothing to
beg for treats and petting, even Hing accepted his physical
touch—if not any mental contact as yet.
"The coyotes eat and drink well. They are in good condition but
they resist bonding very strongly. It will take time but I think
they'll come around in the end." At least he prayed they
would. "And the cat?" "That's a different matter.
If Ideena hadn't shot her it would be a lot easier. As it is the
animal associates me with her pain. Once she's healed further I
may be able to convince her that I am a friend. It all takes
time." Dedran scowled. "I don't
like having them here so long. There are too many snoopers
prying. I'll make arrangements in case anyone does discover
anything I'd prefer they didn't know." He broke off and looked at
Cregar. "Let's just say that there's to be no evidence of any
kind at all if a search gets too close." He walked away, heading for
the main tent and Cregar was left thinking about everything
happening lately. He didn't like any of this. And what had that
last comment meant? The possible disposal of Baris and Ideena
didn't worry him. That Dedran might have the child disposed of if
the authorities pressed too closely behind did bother
him. He suddenly felt an odd need
to protect Laris. She was a good kid, she admired his training of
the circus beasts, and she was good with the animals herself. He
didn't remember clearly why he felt somehow protective of her.
Only that somewhere behind the fog of years, from the
before-time, when he'd had a team who loved him and a place of
his own in society, he'd known a kid like her. On a planet
destroyed by the Xik, he thought. He dismissed his vague,
trauma-blurred memories of the little sister he'd loved when he
had parents and siblings and a world. But Ishan had been
destroyed by the Xik and all he'd known and loved had gone with
his planet. Over her years with the circus Laris had grown more
and more to look like his sister. But Cregar didn't want to
remember all the pain of loss again. He forgot again by an effort
of will, his memories sliding back into the mists in his
head. In the security building
Anders's assistant was speaking quietly into a comunit. He turned
to Tani. "Gracious Lady, it is
requested that you join Larash-Ti-Andresson. I will drive you to
the place where he waits." "The three of us will be
going," Storm said firmly. "Can we assume that after all this,
our quarry escaped?" The assistant flushed unhappily and said
nothing. Storm nodded. "They did. I see. All right. Drive us to
meet Anders." They met a man who under the
mask of quiet competence was fuming. Storm was honestly
interested. "How did they escape?" Anders evaluated the question
and understood the genuine interest. The questioner had been in a
similar business after all. "They had an emergency
override program. When the navcomp was blown by the
scramble-laser the program kicked in. It allowed them to set
their ship down in any open area within a certain distance. That
distance was determined by how high they were when they had to
begin descent again. The program uses a combination of height and
side-jets to give a ship options in case of navcomp
malfunction." "Your people weren't
allowing for the program?" "Someone will be answering
for that. It's a new system and the people I sent out to collect
Baris and Ideena never expected a ship that old to have it
installed." He paused. "In fairness to my people I should say
that I would have thought the program too new and different to
interface well with that ship's older equipment. But if I'd been
out there myself I'd have still taken it into consideration just
in case. They didn't and that gave Baris and Ideena a chance, one
they didn't waste time in taking. We traced them to the street
outside a building in the city. They were not seen entering by
the building's security cameras." "So they've vanished," Storm
said flatly. "For the moment." Anders's
eyes took on a hard gleam. "Just for the moment. The governor has
posted a reward for information. That's not for public
consumption, by the way. We're just filtering it quietly through
a few underworld informants. But every little criminal in the
place will know about the reward by tomorrow. We'll have to sift
through a lot of rubbish but someone who knows something will
get to considering how much they know—and what it's worth. Then they'll
make a call." Tani looked up at him. "What
if the someone hiding them is in as deep or deeper? What if
they're the ones who hired those two from the start? They aren't
going to come running to sell them to you. They'd be selling
themselves at the same time." She received a look of
respect. "That's true. But there are always people who know small
pieces of information and who aren't really involved. They'll
talk, collect the reward, and immunity from prosecution for
whatever minor crimes are on what passes for their conscience."
He straightened, hands massaging the small of his back. "Don't
worry. Baris and Ideena will turn up." He strolled ahead making
for the hovercar, missing Storm's last comment to Tani and
Logan. "I'm sure they will. I'm
just not as sure as he is that they'll be in one piece." From the
looks of agreement the other two felt the same. Anders wasn't as sure as
he'd seemed. In reality he had thought of that himself. But he'd
seen the full file on the fugitives. They'd been involved in much
more than was apparent from their list of actual charges. In a
secondary file there were pages of supposition and suspicion.
Brightland alone suspected Baris and Ideena of involvement in
everything from a couple of clever assassinations to several
brutal robberies in which every possible witness had been
eliminated. It made it likely the pair
could take care of themselves. Then, too, they could be valuable
still to those who'd hired them. Anders thought that Ideena would
be keeping a wary eye on those employers anyway. She'd know that
often employees who became a risk were quietly deleted from the
equation. She'd be watching for any hint that was planned. He
thought that Ideena and her partner would turn up alive
eventually. It was just a question of when—and where. So he partly discounted the
chance her employers would dispose of the two. Ideena would be
alert and she'd keep the man alert too. The pair would most
likely stay low, seeking a chance to get their ship back and get
off-planet. He'd put a cordon about the ship to deal with one
part of that. He'd pick them up if they appeared. For the other possibility,
that they might elude his men, he'd had the ship rendered
inoperable. It would appear to be working, but there was a stop
on the engines. Even if Baris produced a spare navcomp and had
the undisturbed hours needed to replace the ship's system, the
vessel would stay right where it was. And the street-smart were
talking. Anders had spies and contacts who owed him favors in
many areas of the local crime network. Already word would be
spreading. He had a two-pronged attack there as well. Firstly
there was the reward. It was generous but with it went word that
Anders would not appreciate his time being wasted for nothing. To
help that along he had a section of his people rousting every
game in town. Each time it was carefully
explained that they were searching for Baris and the Lady Ideena.
Once they were found, this poking into every corner could stop.
Anders gave a hard grin. His efforts were infuriating half the
big criminal groups in the city. Once they were annoyed enough
they'd start doing his work. After that Ideena and her man were
as good as in an interrogation cell. At the circus Baris and
Ideena certainly felt as if they were prisoners. The hidden
portion of the animal cage was barely six feet wide and ten long.
It held two very narrow bunks along the far end from the
entrance. There was no entertainment but themselves so they spent
much of the time eating, sleeping, quarreling, and drinking. None
of it was completely satisfactory. The food was usually lukewarm
and bland. Dedran would give them only weakened cider. And with
the narrow bunks sleeping was not as comfortable as
usual. The quarreling was
dangerous. They allowed themselves to do so only when the
alternative would have been a physical attack. Neither wanted to
risk that. Not on each other or on those who, for the moment,
sheltered them. But Ideena knew her partner was becoming
uncontrollable. Baris had never reacted well to imprisonment. The
few times he'd spent short periods in jail he'd had to be sedated
much of the time. She'd timed the visits made to them with food
and the longer periods when they were left alone. Now she
spoke. "Let's get out." Baris stared. "I thought it
was too dangerous?" "Staying here while we both
go crazy is just as bad. If we disguise ourselves as father and
son again we could have a while outside this rat hole. Dedran
doesn't have to know." Baris was scrambling into
his outfit before she'd finished speaking. Once Ideena was ready
they drifted out of the cage alley and joined the crowd flowing
along past the sideshows. They stayed out several hours,
returning more relaxed to sleep well. After that they risked it
again. Then again. But apart from that, Baris
wanted a decent drink. He'd have angrily refuted the idea that he
was an alcoholic, and he never got really drunk, but he did like
something strong and the fruit-juice-weakened cider which was all
Dedran allowed them just wasn't enough to keep Baris happy. If he
got his hands on that girl when no one was around he was sure he
could scare her into finding him something decent to
drink. He hadn't seen Cregar and
had no idea that the ex-beast master was watching any time the
girl slipped away to take supplies to the fugitives. Cregar had
seen them out however, and recognized them despite the disguises.
He knew the risks they took. He was holding the information. If
he had to stir Dedran to a decision he'd have the
spur. Baris lounged on the lower
bunk. He heard the tiny click that was the latch and moved like
lightning. Laris entered and his hands closed on her. One over
her mouth, the other clamping her wrists together. But his victim
hadn't grown up in the camps for nothing. Cregar would be
waiting. Her heel slammed out. Not against Baris but against the
door which was still ajar. It crashed open. She kicked again through the
opening. Cregar would see that and know she was fighting. Baris's
hand gripped her wrists as he tried to kick the door shut again.
From around the girl's neck a chain fell to dangle her ring
against the rough tunic. Her attacker's eyes widened. "Well, well. So that's who
got this. Ideena, take a look. I guess I get a drink if I want
one now." He swung Laris toward the watching woman. Cregar
entered just as Ideena rose to her feet. She took one look at his
face and sat again. Ideena knew when to back up. "Let her go, Baris." Cregar
looked bland and uninvolved until one saw his eyes. Baris wasn't
looking. "I do what I want an' right
now I want a drink." Cregar wasn't arguing. He
placed a palm-sized needier against the man's neck and triggered.
Baris slid heavily to the floor, eyes shut, body limp. Laris
landed half under him with a gasp as his weight drove the air
from her lungs. Ideena remained sitting as Cregar looked at
her. "Nothing to do with me," she
said. He nodded acceptance of that as she continued. "If it was
I'd mention a ring the girl has and I'd remember where it came
from. Dedran won't hear about the ring if he doesn't hear about
this." It was Cregar's turn to nod. "Soldier's oath?" He nodded
again and Ideena relaxed. She'd never kept her word in her life
if there was profit in breaking it. But she knew that those who'd
been in the service prided themselves otherwise. Cregar lifted the tousled
Laris and helped her from the hidden room. She could stand,
bruised and scared though she was. He surveyed her once they were
safely outside. "Did he hurt
you?" "Just bruises; he'd have hit
me if you hadn't gotten there, though." The look she turned on
him was honest gratitude and a deep admiration and it warmed him.
He reached for the ring and dropped it back on the chain down her
tunic neck. His hand patted her shoulder. "Long as you're okay."
Something stirred in Laris. Without thinking she turned her head
to the side and, in a gesture old as the camps, kissed the hand
which held her. "Thanks to you. I won't
forget. Camp oath on that." She shook herself. "I'd better
get going." She accepted the light push he gave her,
grinned at him, and hurried away. Cregar stood considering the
past ten minutes. He'd sworn not to mention Baris and his actions
just now. He hadn't sworn not to tell Dedran a few other things
his boss didn't know as yet. Such as that pair's habit of running
about the circus in disguise, and maybe bringing the peacekeepers
down on the circus. Cregar would wait just a little longer and he
had no doubt that the pair of fools would stray so far over the
line Dedran would have no choice but to eliminate the dangers
they posed to his plans. After her escape from Baris
and Ideena, Laris worked busily, trying to smooth from her mind
the few moments of fear. The circus with its people was becoming
dangerously unstable. If things continued that way she might have
to run. Trastor wasn't a bad world on which to get out. Their
bond-laws were easier than those on some of the other worlds. She
could prove she'd been illegally bonded. She had enough to pay
her way for two years with the credits Prauo had brought her and
the cat's-eye the Quades had permitted her to keep. Better yet, she could no
doubt find a trade to learn here in the city and buy in on an
apprenticeship for a year. Depending on the work she chose, her
time of service would be from three to seven years. But after
that she'd have a trade and a guild. Maybe she could find
something where her liking for animals would serve her. There was
also Prauo to consider. Laris felt his attention. *I
wondered where I fitted in, furless-sister.* *You always
will.* *That is good. As for the
ones whose minds I do not like.* There was the sound in her head
which was his laughter. *I think they will be dealt with soon
enough. Too many have plans for them. They will not elude all.
You do well. Continue to play the men, one against the
other.* He was gone again. Laris
worried as she swept. She didn't want to go near Baris and Ideena
even once more. And Dedran would expect her to continue. He knew
nothing about Baris. Cregar wouldn't spill. He'd oathed. She
thought wistfully of Logan, and of riding over the vast acres of
the Quade ranch. If only she wasn't trapped here, if only she and
Prauo could be free. She'd like to see more of Logan if only she
didn't have his beasts on her conscience. Her thoughts wandered
back to the humans concealed in the secret section of the cage.
Cregar would keep an eye on her when she went there again, she
hoped. He liked her and he didn't like Baris and
Ideena—or Dedran. She liked him too,
although it was a pity he'd ever gotten involved with the circus.
She didn't think he was happy here. It was good for her that he
was here though. Cregar was thinking about
the same thing. Sure, the circus had given him a place. But maybe
it was time to get out. Cregar knew Dedran's boss; the man was a
Thieves Guild patron and in the guild there were factions. Nhara
was likely to be hard-pressed to hold his patron status with an
expensive plan which had yielded nothing so far. If Nhara went
down so did Dedran—and the circus. Very possibly any
of the staff the guild thought might know too much would also
vanish. That definitely included Cregar. He saw a familiar face
approaching and hid the startled feeling which shot through him.
What was the boy doing here? Ideena had shot Logan, the circus
held the beasts taken from the family; could the lad be looking
for any of them here? At the least it wasn't a good omen that the
boy suddenly appeared. More than ever he felt it might be time to
get away from the circus. He kept his face bland as he nodded
politely. "If you're looking for Laris, she's grooming the
tigerbats." Logan grinned cheerfully.
"Thanks. What's the season been like here so far?" "Good. Real good. How is it
that you're here on Trastor?" "Oh, my brother and his wife
had business here and I came along for the ride." Cregar liked the sound of
that even less. It was possible the business mentioned was the
recovery of their animals; or had Baris and Ideena left some sort
of a trail to the circus? He allowed his gaze to drift over the
lad. A decent boy. Good family background, money, land, and
animals. The girl could go farther and fare much worse. "You want
to take off with her a couple of hours, tell her I said I'd do
the work." A hint of red showed across
the boy's cheekbones. "I will, and thanks." Cregar nodded and
turned away as if it was nothing. Once the boy was out of sight
Cregar headed in another direction. Dedran should know the boy
and his family were on Trastor. Logan paced slowly along the
cage rows looking for the tigerbat cage. He'd told Storm and Tani
where he was going and they'd agreed. "Brad did say to tell the
girl her name and ask about the animals," Storm had commented.
"Stars know Anders hasn't found out anything. You may as well see
if there's anything to be found out about the origins of those
tigerbats." Tani had smiled gently.
"Tell Laris her full name and that Brad's still looking. Storm
and I will come by later on maybe." Logan left. The hovercab
delivered him to the circus lines in a matter of minutes and then
he had only to find Laris." He saw her first and felt quick
pleasure. She didn't know they were on Trastor. She'd be
delighted. *Sister!* Laris felt Prauo's
alarm. *The ring. Hide it, now. Quickly!* She obeyed at once.
Seconds later she heard the voice. "Laris, it's Logan. Hi!" She
turned in sudden shock, thanking Prauo as she did so. Logan
mustn't see the ring. He mustn't know. Her mind whirled as she
smiled a shy, half-guilty welcome. What was he doing here? Did he
know Storm and Tani's beasts were here? Why had he
come? Chapter
Fifteen Laris was suddenly and
strongly aware of the ring down her tunic, the bright sunshine,
and Logan's happy grin. They jumbled together in her mind in a
wash of joy and guilt. She couldn't even return the ring. The
circus had left well before the attack on the native camp and
Quade ranch. If she tried to give the ring back Logan would know
she knew who'd attacked him and stolen the beasts. He'd never
forgive her. At the same time she knew she was smiling at Logan.
Pleased to see him and showing it. "Logan, what are you doing
here?" "I came with Tani and
Storm." His grin left slowly as he told her much of what she
already knew—and wished very hard that she
didn't—of the raids on the Nitra clan and
the High Peaks ranch house. Of his injuries and the kidnapping of
Surra, Hing, and her babies. The loss of Tani's
coyotes. "The authorities think that
there's someone killing beast masters and stealing their teams
for some reason." He looked really serious by now. "I suppose it
could be some new Xik idea. Storm doesn't think so though, nor
does Brad; that's why we're here, to talk to the authorities.
They'll listen to Tani on Trastor." He skipped the reasons the
authorities were listening, no need to go into the whole tale of
Tani's father. He brightened. "I met a man
on the way in." He described Cregar and Laris nodded. "Cregar. He's a sort of
second-in-command for Dedran when he's here." Oh gods, she
shouldn't have said that. If Logan thought that Cregar was away
from the circus sometimes he might wonder what the man was
doing. Logan wasn't even thinking
of that. He had another idea. "So he's got some authority here?
Good, because he said if you want to take off with me for a
couple of hours, he'll cover your work. I've got something to
tell you." Laris considered fast,
putting aside her guilt at her part in the recent events. Cregar
was caring for the meercats and coyotes alone now—at his insistence. Laris still
looked after Surra. If anyone else attempted that the animal
promptly became worse. Guilt and sorrow at Surra's pain were
eating at the girl but she dared not act. Not yet. As for what Logan was saying
it sounded as if the raid on Arzor was continuing to stir up too
much interest. Dedran would want to know all about it. She could
use that as an excuse. Feed Dedran small harmless bits of
information while she spent as much time with Logan as she could.
The thought made her happy. Then her feelings plummeted again.
His requests for her company would last only so long as he didn't
know she was involved. But she could be happy with him until he
did find out. "Well, if Cregar said so.
That's kind of him. I'll just go to my cabin and put something
clean on. Wait for me here, Logan. I won't take long." She had to
get the ring stowed away. It wouldn't do to take it with her and
have something happen. She changed in a flurry with Prauo eyeing
her from the bunk, purple eyes amused. *Take care,
sister-without-fur. I shall watch what happens here for you, and
listen also. You are wise to do this.* Laris was surprised at the
last. *Wise, why?* For a minute he said
nothing, then, *Learn all you can. Dedran plans, Cregar also. And
the two whose minds taste of evil. All plan. Yet it may be what
you say and do that is the pivot on which all things hang. The
currents of what-is move; ride them and live; let them crash over
you and die. They do not know this. I do and I can see.* Laris
wasn't sure she'd understood some of that but there wasn't time
to discuss Prauo's words. It half made sense and she'd go with
that half. *A11 right. I'll learn all I
can. You stay at the back of my mind and hear it. Tell me if I
should do anything. I've got to go or Logan will get tired of
waiting.* The big cat yawned, fangs
closing with a sharp snick. *That could be true—if he waited many hours. Since it
is you for whom he waits, he is only impatient to see you again.*
His eyes shut and he relaxed, then opened one eye. *Go, or do you
dream of mating, go.* Laris blushed and went hastily. Logan was admiring the
tigerbats. He took her hand when she arrived. "It's so great to
see you again. Tell me about this bunch. You work with them,
don't you? How hard are they to train?" She talked tigerbats. Logan
was easy to talk to. He knew animals and liked them. Understood
some of the ways in which they thought. She found herself telling
him again how she wished Skreel, the lead tigerbat, and his tiny
swarm could be free. Logan looked at her. "Have you ever wondered
about the last couple that arrived? Lereyne found out that
tigerbats were almost extinct about five years ago. Since then
they've put aside a special reserve for them. Dad says that it's
been illegal to export them from Lereyne since then." "But Dedran got ours just
over two years ago." Laris was thoughtful. "Of course, other
worlds have them in zoos. He never said where this pair came
from. And some rich VIPs keep them to show off." She looked at
the tigerbats. "If they were stolen from their home, Logan,
that's awful." "There's a way to
know." "How?" "If you took samples Tani's
aunt and uncle could check. You know they run the ark. All they
have to do is match DNA with the existing gene pool on Lereyne.
That'd tell them if the tigerbats were from there." Laris wrinkled her brow.
"But aren't all tigerbats related? Wouldn't the samples just
match anyway?" "Nope. Brad checked. It's
been five years since tigerbats could be legally exported. But
they were getting rare for years before that. Lereyne looked up
the records. The last permit was almost seventeen years before
that. They can run the DNA matches right down to recent
generations. If your two show DNA that matches, then they came
from Lereyne in their lifetime. I can't explain it all to you.
Just take my word for it." His fingers tightened on her
hand. "I do, I am." Laris was
flustered. "What do you want me to do, just take samples and get
them to you?" "Yes. I promise we won't
make trouble for you." His tone became edged. "I'm sure Dedran
will have an innocent explanation of how he came by them." Laris
was sure of that too. "But if they were stolen from Lereyne,
they'll be confiscated and returned. You'd like that for
them?" Laris had no doubts about
that answer. "Yes. I would. I just wish they could all go back.
They aren't happy in cages. They aren't like the carra or the
dogs. They really love this life. The tigerbats
don't." "Then help us find
out." She nodded slowly. "All
right. When?" He swung her to face him, a
broad smile on his face. "How long can you spend with
me?" "Cregar said a couple of
hours. Anyhow I'd have to be back in plenty of time for the next
performance. Why?" "We'll go to the park and
have something to eat. Then, when we come back if you think it's
safe you can get the samples and I can leave with
them." By the time they returned,
Laris thought, the other circus people would be busy getting
ready for the ring. Dedran would be busiest of all. No one was
likely to question what she did. But she mustn't let Logan know
how often she took samples. She let him tell her how to do the
job and provide the slides as he led her toward the park. At the
far side of the green area were benches. They settled there, eyes
on each other as they talked. Laris felt happy all over when he
reached for her hand. His gaze on her was gentle,
almost—she was afraid to believe what her
heart told her—perhaps his gaze was loving, yet
that could be wishful thinking. They strolled a while, her
hand still clasped in his. Laris had never felt so contented, but
her joy was tinged with a bitter guilt—if Logan knew what she'd done he
would hate her. In that hour she alternated between happiness,
fear, and rage that she had been swept up in Dedran's schemes.
Finally they returned to sit at the small cafe, ordering food and
drink. "Finish that bun and
listen." Logan leaned forward. "Brad was able to get your records
as far back as the camp on Meril. All he's got so far is your
full name. No trace of your mother. You were alone on Meril. But
we've got that far." He saw her face fall. "Brad says it all
takes time but he's sure he can trace you farther back." He
grinned teasingly. "Don't you want to know your name?" Her face told him the
answer. "Okay. You are Shallaris Trehannan. Brad looked that up
too. Where the Shallaris came from, we don't know. But Brad says
that Trehannan is a very old Terran name. When he found that he
read an old rhyme to us. It goes, 'Tre, Pol, and Pen are the
Cornish men.' " "What does that
mean?" "Cornwall was part of the
British Isles. It was one of the oldest lands settled there. Many
Cornish families had prefixes in their names like that. It means
that if you hear a name with Tre, Pol, or Pen at the beginning
the family most likely came from this Cornwall." "Trehannan!" Laris tasted
the feeling. She had a name. A place of origin. She was Shallaris
Trehannan and her family had come originally from Cornwall on
Terra. Maybe not in her generation, but once. Her face lit with a
smile of pure uncomplicated joy, and Logan caught his breath. It
was wonderful to know he'd made her that happy. He saw a shadow
slide over the delight. "What is it?" If Brad had
found out that much, Laris knew, he must also know what she'd
hidden and Dedran had lied about. She was a bond-servant, not
Dedran's ward. She summoned resolution. "I'm ... Dedran bonded me,"
she blurted. Logan smiled gently. "I know. He lied. Brad says
you weren't of legal age either. You could get the bond revoked.
We'd help if you wanted that. Tani has a special status here.
She'd talk to the governor for you. Trastor has bond laws and
Dedran's broken just about all of them." She sat thinking. They'd
help. Would they still help her if they knew the rest of it? And
what about the samples? What would happen to all of the animals
if Dedran was discredited? If he was ruined because of her, he'd
talk. About her, about the thefts she'd carried out at his order.
How understanding would the authorities be over those? And what
if Dedran insisted on claiming Prauo? A tickle in the back of her
head. *Tell him you'd rather wait until you can be sure the
tigerbats are safe. He'll understand that.* Laris reached out to take
Logan's hand. "I know Dedran broke laws, but he hasn't abused
me." She grinned wryly. "Well, just cuffs, a beating, and a crack
of the whip now and again. He's fed me decently though, and I've
been respectably clothed. It was my only way out of the camp. I
don't like Dedran." The look in her eyes said that statement was
milder than the truth. "Still, if I'm here until we know about
Skreel, my lead tigerbat, and his swarm, I can make sure they
stay put. That Dedran doesn't have them spirited away or
killed." "That's sensible so long as
it isn't too hard on you." "I'll manage," Laris assured
him briefly. "Then, Shallaris Trehannan,
shall we walk?" He stood as she giggled at the
alliteration. "Why, we shall lope, Logan."
She ran for the park's broad acres of grass, laughing as he
chased her. She danced. "Can't catch me!" The words ended in a
squeak as he caught her arm and spun her into his arms. His lips
touched hers with a tenderness that was pain. He wouldn't do that
if he knew the truth. He wouldn't hold her like that. As if she
would break. *Live for today, sister.
Tomorrow may change all things.* She gave her lips to Logan then,
praying that it would. They returned to the circus.
Content to walk holding hands. Everyone was busy as they'd hoped
and Laris drifted them along unobtrusively in the direction of
the cages. Once there, she took the slides held out to her, and
the small needle. She listened solemnly a second time to the
muttered instructions before she took the samples, then stowed
them away carefully for him in a bag. Laris watched him leave,
with what was by now an almost familiar mixture of joy and guilt,
before going in search of Cregar. Quietly she told him what she'd
learned. Her eyes on him showed trust and he answered that with a
warning hand on her arm. "Don't tell Dedran about
their theories. Nothing about dead beast masters and stolen teams
and a conspiracy. Let him think they believe it's a one-off. Just
a pirate raid and that they took the animals to sell to rich
VIPs. Don't say any more on that. Not yet. Say you're getting the
boy to talk but it's taking time." His look was thoughtful as he
considered her information. "Tell him everything the lad
said about his side of the raid. Especially that he can identify
Baris and Ideena. Tell him about Tani's father, the hero of
Trastor. That the government will listen to her and they've got
the ports sealed up. That the patrol's interested because of the
attack on the native camp and the theft of sacred jewelry." Laris
nodded obediently. *Prauo?* *He speaks with honesty and
care for you. I read that there is danger and he fears what may
happen. What that may be I cannot read. Listen and agree.* Laris
nodded at Cregar as he spoke, his face earnest. "You mean I should emphasize
how dangerous it could be having Baris and Ideena
here?" "Exactly but be subtle. Then
leave it to me. Just try to let me know when you're telling
Dedran all this." She considered. "He'll know
where I've been already. Once the evening performance is done
he'll want to see me. If you keep an eye out you could go in once
I leave." "Good girl. I'll do that.
You take care." He moved then swung back. "If Dedran ever thinks
the peacekeepers are after him, if they come here, you stay away
from the cages. Particularly the ones with the hidden sections.
Hear me. That's a true warning. I'm not saying more so don't ask.
But you and your cat stay away." He strode off before she
could ask questions. He'd asked his own after that comment of
Dedran's. He'd found answers he didn't like. The circus boss was
ruthless, Cregar had always known that. What Dedran had done made
sense in that way. But Cregar didn't have to like it. He sighed
as he walked. A man did stupid things. Then he got in deeper and
deeper. Until he'd dug himself into a hole too deep to climb out
of. So far the kid wasn't in any
holes, Cregar thought. She was straight. That wouldn't last. He
knew Dedran was using her and that big cat of hers for
burglaries. A bond-servant couldn't be punished if she testified
under probe she'd been in fear of her life or safety, or the life
or safety of another. But how long before Laris succumbed to the
lure of money, if only for the funds to escape? He'd seen it
before. As for Baris, his smile was savage. Let Dedran hear the
kid, then Cregar would tell him a few things. After that there'd
be no more worries about Baris and Ideena. He strode in the direction
of the circus mess tent. He'd help things along with a nice jug
of something for Baris to drink. He drew half a jug of the cider
then added, not the innocuous fruit juice, but Fever brandy. A
wicked mixture which would prime Baris well. With that inside him
the big man would be mad to don a disguise and get out into the
midway. When half drunk, Baris always looked for a woman other
than Ideena. Cregar would watch to know when he went out. He
looked grimly across to where the circus boss's tent stood.
Everyone had plans, not just Dedran. Tani was one of those who
certainly had plans. She grilled Logan about what Laris had said
about the tigerbats, collected the tigerbat samples, and saw
preliminary testing begun on them. Matching the samples fully
would take much longer than the basic tests, but with that begun
she could speak to Aunt Kady. "Send the second set of
samples now," Kady advised. "Not to the ark, send them to
Lereyne. See if the patrol has a ship going from Trastor sometime
soon." "Should I send any notes
with the results?" "No. I'll do that. I'll talk
to a friend." She reeled off a name and address. "He's involved
in the prevention of endangered species smuggling. I'll see to it
that if the results match tiger-bat DNA held on Lereyne, he'll
talk to me before he moves on the information." Storm, with a wider
knowledge of how far evil would go to be safe, interrupted. "Make
very sure of that, Kady. If samples indicate the beasts were
stolen or smuggled and your friend goes in to get the animals too
openly, the owner is likely to destroy the beasts so there's no
proof against him." "Officer Tarwyn will know
that." Kady's lips quirked on the com screen. "It's hardly the
first raid he'll have led over illegal animals." "Better check footing than
fall." Kady chuckled. "So true.
Love to you, Tani. Take care. And you too, Storm." Her voice and
image faded into the static of the starlanes. Storm considered
the samples and the basic results which had just
arrived. "I'll duplicate copies of
these results and split the samples. I'll send our original
results and half the samples to Lereyne, hold the other samples,
and a copy of the results here. That way we have backup if we
need it." He glanced at Logan. "I think you should spend as much
time with Laris as you can. If those tigerbats are illegal, we
don't know what else the owner could be doing. If things get
nasty it would help if you were there to get her and Prauo
out quickly." "If you think so." Logan
kept the exultation from his face with an effort. "I do. Don't you,
Tani?" She nodded. Logan glanced at
the chrono on the wall. "Then I'll go and see the afternoon
performance tomorrow." He left so quickly it was more of a
controlled run. His brother and Tani grinned at each
other. "Were we like
that?" Storm shook his head. "No,
but then we met over Mandy. The first thing I heard from the pair
of you was rude." Tani laughed. She remembered that. Her paraowl
had been taught—by a disaffected worker on the
ark—a number of rude phrases in
several languages with a common word for each as the trigger.
Storm had inadvertently spoken the trigger word and embarrassed
Tani to blushing fury. She'd blamed him. But not long after that
Arzor had been in danger, and they'd learned to work together to
save the planet she'd come to love. But there'd been no time for
walking in the park holding hands. She sobered. "I think I
preferred it our way. By the time we had leisure to talk we both
knew what we wanted." Storm hugged her. "I still
know, dearling," he said, using his word for her which had become
their own. "And if Logan is away tomorrow we can spend time by
ourselves. Unless Anders has something urgent in mind. But it
isn't likely he'll be laying hands on Baris and Ideena that
soon." For which mercy those named
were grateful. They were not so happy about everything else.
Still, life was improving fractionally, Baris thought. Their tiny
quarters were quiet while the evening performance was on. Just as
it became quieter he'd thought he heard a tap at the door. He
checked the spy hole. No one. But by the door stood a lidded jug.
It had probably been the girl. She wasn't risking coming near him
just now. Baris slid the door open a little, grabbed the jug, and
flicked the door shut. "What is it?" "Just fruit juice," he
assured Ideena. He gulped a large mouthful and swallowed as he
turned away. Unseen by his companion his face turned pink and his
eyes bulged as the liquid seared its way down. Baris opened his
mouth to correct his words and shut it again. Why tell Ideena?
She'd only keep him from drinking too much of it. And after all
this time shut up with her a man needed a bit of amusement. This
stuff was good! He gulped again and smiled. Very
good! Ideena ignored him and
drifted back into a doze. Quietly Baris got drunk. For two people
the jug would have left both happy and somewhat dizzy. Perhaps
inclined to sing. But Baris wasn't a peaceful or pleasant drunk,
he was drinking alone, and several liters of the mixture inspired
him not to sing but to find either a woman or a good
brawl. He drifted off into a
brandy-fueled daze for a while. He'd had most of the jug. He
surfaced again an hour after the performance in the ring ended
and the people returning past his room woke him. Good. If people
were about he could don a disguise and get out for a while. He
dressed carelessly. He still looked like the ponderous,
respectable, middle-aged man he had before, except that the man
was now drunk, and contentious with it. He crept out quietly
after finishing the last few gulps in the jug. That he took with
him. Maybe he could refill it somewhere. Laris finished her turns in
the ring, then changed and settled the animals back into their
show cages. Afterward she waited where Dedran could see her. He
appeared at the entrance to his tent and waved her
over. "What did the boy have to
say?" He finished shutting the entrance as he stared at
her. "He talked about the raid on
the native camp. Then the one on their ranch," Laris told him.
She elaborated and once she reached the identification of Baris
and Ideena she saw his lips tighten. His eyes glittered with
fury. She explained how Trastor's authorities, normally so
reluctant to help with another world's problems, were listening
to Tani and just why that was so. It became unpleasantly clear
to Dedran that instead of this fuss soon dying down, it would
continue, probably even escalate. Discovery of Baris and Ideena
hiding in the circus could ruin him, and possibly ruin his patron
in the guild. And if even the slightest breath of trouble touched
Nhara, Dedran would pay. He'd contacted Nhara about the men who'd
posed as security, and had it confirmed that there was
in-fighting among the guild patrons. Dedran was on a knife-edge
now and he knew it. He hesitated. Laris finished her
story. "Do I keep seeing Logan? At
least he's in touch with what Larash-Ti is doing and Logan tells
me everything he hears." She pasted a bored expression on her
face and hoped. "Yes, see him as you can and
work allows." Dedran had other things on his mind. He unlocked
the entrance and stood aside for her to leave. Laris went, as
quickly as would not be too obvious. She passed Cregar as he
approached. He hissed softly in slurring camp dialect in case
there were bugs or Dedran's spies were listening
unseen. "You'm say wha' we
agree?" "Es. N' more." "Done good, girl." He
entered the tent and the entrance closed again. Laris didn't wait
around. Dedran's tent looked flimsy but it was made of an
impervoplas which was nonflamable, soundproof, and had a few
other advantages. Inside Cregar was talking slowly, building up
to telling Dedran that his dangerous guests, far from being well
under cover, were often abroad around the circus. "You're sure of that?"
Dedran was almost incredulous. He'd believe a lot of Baris but
Ideena surely couldn't be that much of an idiot. But listening,
it was certain she had been. "I wasn't certain at first.
They disguise themselves well. Then I spotted Baris in that
pompous merchant outfit of his. When he went out again I had a
word with several circus people. They remembered seeing the
merchant a number of times." He halted with a definite air of
having said all he needed. Dedran wavered. It wasn't that he
minded killing, but could he risk it? Ideena was clever. It might
not be easy to dispose of her without a fuss, especially with
Anders's spies everywhere. "I'll have to deal with it."
He could speak to Ideena. "I'll go there..." he began when a
small urgent voice began calling at the door. He ripped it open
and grabbed. Laris catapulted in already in
midsentence. "Baris is out. He's in the
midway. He's drunk. Any minute now he'll make a scene grabbing
some girl. Quick, do something!" Cregar understood before
Dedran did, but then he'd supplied the ingredients for the
trouble. He nodded. "Baris! I knew that pair
were trouble. Dedran, you deal with Ideena. There's no choice.
She won't listen if Baris vanishes. I'll see to that drunken
fool. Laris, show me where." They were gone, leaving Dedran to
spin momentarily. If Ideena hadn't stopped
Baris going out alone it suggested she'd been sleeping. She
wouldn't know the man was causing trouble. And if she didn't
know, she wouldn't be expecting trouble herself. Dedran raced for
the ship. In a cupboard there he had a number of interesting and
unusual items and he knew one which would be useful
now. On the midway Baris was
stumbling along. After telling her bond-master about Logan, Laris
had gone to Surra to tend the big cat and make her comfortable.
She stroked fur grown rough with illness, repeating her promise.
She would help, find Storm, free Surra, but not yet. Soon, she
was sure. She sat stroking as she considered ways. Perhaps if she
could get Surra away somehow, the way she'd arrived, in one of
the lifter pallets. Or maybe she could send Storm and Tani an
anonymous message. But would they be satisfied
with getting Surra back? Wouldn't it just make them look harder
for the other missing team members? She knew how she'd feel if
Prauo went missing. She'd do anything to get him back. She
wouldn't be in a rush to forgive someone who had stolen him,
either. It wasn't as if she'd be returning Surra in mint
condition. With a final stroke of the
cat's fur she rose and slipped from the hidden room. It was then
she spied the familiar figure of Baris and fled for help. She
pointed him out to Cregar after that and hastily retired to her
own room with Prauo. The big male feline couldn't see anyone if
Laris wasn't looking at them but he could read feelings.
Particularly those of people either of them knew. It was how he'd
warned her of Logan approaching. Laris lay full length on her
bed, Prauo sprawled beside her, her hand on his shoulder as she
received his impressions. Prauo touched the minds of Cregar and
Baris, felt their emotions, and shared them wordlessly with
her. *Waves of giddy lust;
indignation; a feeling that walls closed in on him,* Baris
reeled. *Taste of Cregar, old pain,
new anger. Dislike focused on another. A thread of fear for the
animals.* Baris again. *Recognition.
Amusement. A surge of patronage. A lesser one
approaches. *A hard-edged anger replied.
A tinge of red. Pleasure. At last. No more pretense. A fractional
flash of a girl who looked a little like Laris.* Baris stumbling. *Odd. World
whirling. Legs folding. Blackness.* Prauo spoke in her head.
*The bad one is no more.* Laris knew it for the truth.
She could only hope Dedran knew what he was doing if Cregar had
killed at his order. If the body was found ... no, it would be
bodies. Dedran disliked loose ends. Ideena would be gone as well.
She curled up in her bed and slept. Tomorrow she'd check, very
carefully. Dedran and Cregar had no
time to sleep. The idea for the untraceable disposal of the
bodies was the circus boss's plan, but he required help. He'd
have preferred to use the ship's engine turntable. But the
engines were stopped for overhaul, seeing as the circus was
staying several weeks on Trastor. If he started them again in the
middle of the night, some snooper might ask questions. This other
method would work. It had worked more than once before according
to his sources. It should work again. And so it would have, but
for a technical hitch. Chapter
Sixteen If Larash-Ti-Andresson had
not been happy about the disappearance of Baris and Ideena, their
reappearance left him speechless—for all of ten seconds. After that
what he had to say should have melted his plasteel building to
the foundations. Then he was a whirlwind of action. Demands for
specialist reports propagated like Terran rabbits. Storm and Tani arrived just
as the explosion was dying. Reports had begun to arrive. Anders
read them and exploded all over again. His visitors listened
until the fury had blown itself out. Then Storm asked questions.
"How did it happen, and where were they found?" Anders snarled. "Ideena was
poisoned. Baris was stabbed with a long and very thin blade. I
doubt he even knew it. Here, look at this report." He dropped a
hard copy before Storm and Tani, then continued talking. "The
worst of it is that I suspect this method's been used to dispose
of unwanted people before." Tani raised her gaze from
the report. "How did it go wrong this time?" "Someone will be furious
about that," Anders said grimly. "It was outside the murderer's
control." "Anders, what happened?"
Storm had finished reading the preliminary reports. "Trastor has a couple of
moons as you know. There's a large mining dome on one and a
smaller group on the other. Since they're so close it pays not to
use the expensive type of ship. But we have to run a regular
service. When the mines were opened we had several small,
old-fashioned ships mothballed. We reactivated those. They leave
every fifth day from a small separate port." Anders gave a small snort of
amusement. "That was what wrecked things. The ships are really
old. They use the matter drive. In other words, at a pinch they
can burn anything for fuel." Tani smiled. "They may be
old fashioned but there's still plenty about. The circus you have
here uses a huge old freighter of that sort. And the ark has
those engines. They're workhorses. No speed but a wide and
low-cost range because they can use almost anything at all for
fuel." "Exactly. And they can cost
little to run if they're being used for such short hops. So
that's why we went back to them for the mines. Normally they're
run on compressed fuel bricks. But some bright theorist suggested
we combine operations. She purchased a compactor and is paid to
collect unwanted garbage. That's compressed into bricks and sold
to the mining company at a minimal price." He grunted. "Bright lady.
She makes her money coming and going. Not a lot at each end, but
it's a cheap operation and the two amounts combine to make good
credits. The system is run by her family. Her, a brother, and
their older kids, with a couple of part-time oldsters doing the
light stuff. If what I suspect is true, in the past anyone with a
spare body to get rid of hauled it to the compactor, dumped it in
overnight, and left again." "They filled the compactor
ready for the morning's start?" "Uh-huh. The old chap who
runs it would just have pressed the button when he got there the
next morning. When enough bricks had fallen out into the loader
he runs them to the next ship to lift and loads them into the
outer fuel chamber. That's what did it. He pressed the button.
The compactor gives a groan and dies. He calls the family. The
brother rushes over to fix the compactor, checks the load in it
first, and guess what he finds?" Tani laughed. "I see what
you mean. Bad luck for the killers. Did you ask how often the
compactor breaks down?" "I did. They said it's very
rare. That was only the third time in the five years the system's
been going. But—and listen to this—the other two times it was at the
end of the day. They fixed it overnight and were running again by
morning. In other words: It was unlikely anyone but the family
ever knew about those times. The method must have looked like a
sure thing for disposal. It never broke down." A woman bustled in just
then, laid papers on the desk, and departed in silence. Anders
turned to leaf through them. He glanced up. "Nothing important.
Interviews with everyone we could find at once who lives near the
mining port. No one saw or heard a thing." He shifted a switch.
"Is that pathology report in yet?" "Not yet, sir." "Crats." Anders sat back. "I
asked them to do Ideena first. Maybe finding out what was used on
her will give me a place to start." He looked as if he was about
to explode again. "The nerve of them. I'm looking
everywhere for that pair and someone kills them. Right under my
nose. Then sticks them in the garbage." His gaze on them
sharpened. "Do you think this beast master business could be the
link?" "I think so," Tani said
thoughtfully. "We know they were involved with both raids.
Mandy's imitation of the voice she heard was identified on
Brightland. The authorities there were certain it was Ideena.
Logan saw the woman who shot him and is certain it was her. The
pair are known to have been working together for years. But look
at their records. They don't steal animals." Anders was reading swiftly
down the list of ascribed crimes again. "No. They go for portable
high value. I can see them taking your Thunder-talker's regalia.
Green or white cat's-eye gems are worth a lot of credits in a
very small package." "But this time they grabbed
whatever they could find of some value. Yet they also stopped
much longer to pick up a pair of coyotes, a family of meercats,
and Surra, injured though she was. I think it's the third man. He
was the one after the animals. The other two were on contract
with the right to loot." "Makes sense." Anders
propped his chin on one hand as he reread Ideena's rap sheet.
"That ship was hers. Since officially she and Baris were
fugitives wanted for questioning on both crimes against a citizen
and interplanetary crimes, my people have been tearing the ship
apart. So far they've found some fascinating things which may
clear up a number of the crimes Brightland has listed here.
Nothing on your problem as yet. That may come. "The man who specializes in
the job says he's rarely seen such diverse ways to hide
contraband. He's sure there are still a number of places he
hasn't found. They'd have required damage to the ship and so long
as we had no conviction we couldn't do that." Tani smiled sweetly. "But
now the ship's owners of record have been murdered. It's your
duty to find out how that happened. If you have to tear the ship
down to basic structure it's legal, surely?" "Yeeess. Yes. It is." Anders
was thinking. "After all, it's clear the owners were criminals.
That's plain from things we've found so far. There's no record of
any deed of gift or will disposing of the ship. We should make
every attempt to satisfy court requirements. We have to find
those who'd inherit." "Apart from which, don't you
have the Contingency Law?" Storm suggested before reciting:
"Where the owner of a property has been involved in provable
criminal acts and dies before conviction, the state may
confiscate the property, provided no immediate or minority heirs
exist." He pointed to the documents before Anders. "Baris and Ideena were never
legally bonded. Not to anyone else or each other, and they're
both dead. They have no known children. Brightland says they come
from respectable families there. Their respective parents
formally and legally disowned them. Their siblings are all
adults. Neither Baris nor Ideena have had any contact with their
families in many years. So they can't have any legal
responsibility to sibling offspring. So far as I can see the
Contingency Law applies." Anders nodded. "I'll speak
to the head of the search team." He touched a panel. "Jyrin? Yes,
Anders. Listen. We're applying Contingency Law to that ship
you're in. Rip it apart. I don't care what you do. Just find
everything there is to find even if you have to take it down to
the hull plating." He nodded in reply to a question. "No. On my
authority. We've checked records. No immediate or minor heirs. Go
to it." He turned to grin at them
both. "Jyrin's a good man with similar habits to a Trastorian
burrower." He chuckled. "He looks a bit like one as well but if
there's anything in that ship to find, Jyrin will dig it out.
Once he's done the ship can be put back together again and join
the mining fleet. The governor will be delighted about that.
We've been needing a fourth ship." Tani laughed. "Everyone
benefits. Except Baris and Ideena. I keep wondering who the third
person with them was." "Speaking of a third
person," Anders queried idly. "Where's your brother?" "Where else? With Laris at
the circus." "Which reminds me, I had a
spacegram from Brad Quade. Not long. But he's found out something
more for the girl." He picked up a report and handed it over. It
was as brief as promised. Tani read the few lines rapidly and
looked up. "He says they've traced her
and her mother via two other worlds to Fremlyn. Her mother was
listed in the camp there as Shalmarra Trehannan." Her voice went
up, "And her father as Aylaris who was already dead. See, Storm?
They combined their names for Laris. Brad says that the Fremlyn
camp took in refugees from Bowlil, Meril—and Ishan just before the Xiks
destroyed it. He thinks Ishan is the most likely, but not to tell
Laris that until he finds out more." Storm picked up the
spacegram. "We could go now. Even if we don't find her we could
give this to Logan to pass along." He allowed a tiny smile to
warm his eyes. "I'm sure he'd enjoy that." He swept Tani up, bade
Anders farewell, and once outside hailed a hovercab. They were
borne in the direction of the circus. "Why don't we just give
Logan the report when he comes in tonight?" "Because," Storm said
slowly. "I've been wondering. Those raiders. They're stealing
animals. Where's the easiest place to hide a tree?" Tani blinked. "In a ... I
see. You'd hide animals among other animals. In a private
collection or a zoo except that those don't travel. But a circus
does. I've had a nasty thought too. Those raiders seemed to know
just where to find me. Our High Peaks ranch, fine. That's all on
record. They could have got into conversation with anyone from
High Peaks district." "Except that they didn't.
Remember? They arrived and flew straight to the Djimbut camp then
on to the ranch. No conversations." "So who knew where I'd be?
Brad has a big map of High Peaks on the study wall at the basin
ranch. There's a sketch of the ranch house in the corner. Who's
been to see that?" Storm hesitated. "Laris was
at the basin ranch with us. But how would she know about the clan
camp?" "What do you think Logan
would have talked about? He knew I was going there to hunt for a
ten-day once Laris was gone. I told him just before the circus
left Arzor. I even said I might stay a lot longer if the hunting
was really good. I know he'd have talked about the clan. He's
proud of being a ranger and of me being the Djimbut
clan-friend." The reply was thoughtful.
"That's all possible. But there's one thing there. The raiders
came in as if they expected the Nitra to lie down for them. Laris
would have known better if Logan talked so much. She'd know Nitra
aren't Norbies. They're the wild clans. They're warriors who
shoot first and ask questions of the body. Maybe she steered the
raiders that way—if it was her—hoping they'd fail and be
killed." The cab stopped and the two
of them climbed out. "Say nothing," Storm cautioned. "Let her see
nothing. She's bonded. She may have been forced into this but
even so, she'd be a risk if she realized we're suspicious. We'd
better find Logan first." They found him at the side
entrance to the main tent. The afternoon performance was on and
he was watching the antics of the carras and Terran dogs. Storm
gave him the report from his father and watched as he read it.
Logan's gaze shifted to where Laris waited in line. The next act
was the girl and the tigerbats. His gaze warmed as he watched
her, his face shifting into softer lines. Tani caught Storm's
flickering glance at her and nodded slightly. Logan was in
love. Once the acts were
completed, customers filed out. Laris came running to Logan. "I
have to change, then check all the animals, Dedran's gone into
the city with Cregar for a couple of hours so I'm doing his
rounds. I'll be back soon." She was as good as her word.
They accompanied her to the dog cage, then to spend a little time
with the carras. Quietly Tani began to talk. She spoke of Minou
and Ferarre, how she loved them. How much they were missed and
how sure she was that they missed her and grieved for her
absence. After that Storm took up the theme, telling tales of his
war, of sabotage and reconnaissance missions on strange worlds,
and how a team could be one. Logan noticed nothing but
Storm saw the girl's increasing distress. Her face showed little
but the movements and the posture of her body all betrayed
her. *Sister-without-fur. There
is suspicion in their minds toward you.* *Why? How could they
guess?* *I do not know. But they
wonder. Now may be the time to enlist aid. Swiftly, distract
Logan, when he is gone from your side a moment, speak to the
woman. Be cautious in what you say.* Storm was wondering still
more as he watched. The girl had been almost frantic with stress.
Then, abruptly, her movements changed to those of one who
listened to a voice unheard by the others present. He'd seen that
posture in first-in scouts who had ear-implants. But this child
couldn't have one. To what was she listening? Or to whom? She
asked Logan to go ahead and see that no one was with the
tigerbats. Storm could tell she was deliberately walking more
slowly as they followed Logan. Storm waited, hoping. Laris spoke carefully. She
must make them understand how she was bound by Dedran. She must
betray nothing more than that. Not yet. To Storm's puzzlement,
she began talking about her cat. "I found him at the edge of
the spaceport. He was only a tiny kitten and starving." She
remembered Prauo as he'd been then. His paws, too large for his
little body, and his now distinctive black-and-gold markings had
been softer shades of fawn and a darkish brown. "I couldn't leave him to die
but I was afraid Dedran wouldn't let me keep him. Once he'd seen
Prauo he didn't mind though, he said Prauo might learn tricks and
fit in, if he didn't he could always be sold somewhere." Storm
saw the fear flare brightly in her gaze as she said that and he
began to glimpse her problem. "There's no proof you own
Prauo?" he asked gently. "None, and I'm bonded. On
some worlds Dedran owns not only me, but anything I may have or
earn as well. It was circus food which fed Prauo, a circus bed he
slept on, Dedran owns it all. I have no ownership papers for
Prauo." "Nor does Dedran, I
imagine?" Tani asked. "That wouldn't matter, he
owns me and anyhow, he can always get papers if he wants them."
Storm heard her comment with interest. That Dedran could always
obtain false ownership papers for an animal fitted in with their
suspicions about the tigerbats. He'd mention to Versha what Laris
had said once they were away from here. Laris was still
talking. "You don't know how
fortunate you are, you have your teams within the law and they're
Terran animals, they can't be harmed or taken from you legally
anyhow. The only law which covers Prauo and me says that he isn't
mine." Her gaze fixed on his, and there was both terrible fear
and blazing passion in her voice. "I love Prauo, he's my
friend, I can't even imagine being without him after all this
time. If anything happened to him I think I'd die. We're bound
together—as much as your team is to you.
I'd do anything I had to do to save Prauo; anything at all, no
matter how bad it was." Storm and Tani exchanged
looks, understanding at last how Laris might have been coerced.
If the girl had been entangled in the plot to steal Terran beasts
it had been under duress, yet they would withhold their final
decision on her true guilt or innocence until they discovered the
extent of her involvement. Tani had spent an earlier
part of the day at the graveside of her father. Anders had taken
her there. She'd stood and wept quietly as she read the words
graven deep into the stone. Her father had given everything, his
life, his team, his hope of return, to save an embattled people
struggling against a merciless enemy. Now she looked at Laris.
The girl had nothing, only the cat she loved. She would risk
anything rather than watch him lost to her. In a way her decision
was similar to the one Tani's father had made. Tani's voice was
gentle. She needed to make a bargain clear but without saying
anything which could be used against them later. "We do understand. You know
our grief. Maybe there is hope. A chance that Prauo could have
title established. If so then maybe our grief would also be
lessened." Laris looked them both in
the eye. "If Prauo was safe I'm sure it would be so. But I will
take no risks with Prauo, he must be safe." "We can find out what the
law says and what can be done for you both. How would we speak to
you safely?" "I can tell Logan you are
trying to secure Prauo for me. Dedran has encouraged me to spend
time with him. Pass any word you have for me through him."
Storm's eyebrows rose a little at that. So, the circus boss had a
use for Logan's affection for Laris, did he? No doubt it had been
where much of the information used had come from. "Taking my name in vain?"
Logan had returned. Laris explained and he
nodded eagerly. "I can do that. I think it'd be great if Prauo
couldn't ever be taken away from you. He's beautiful." *The human has
discernment.* *He likes me.* *Great discernment. A good
beginning, furless-sister. I think they understand your dilemma,
their feelings of distrust and anger against you have faded
somewhat.* He was gone again and Laris
returned to showing her visitors about, gradually relaxing with
Logan's teasing. If there was word about the tigerbats they'd let
her know about that too, she was assured. It might be possible to
use that information, if the animals had been illegally obtained,
to secure Prauo to her as well. How, they weren't sure. But a way
might be found. She slept soundly that night. Her heart lifted
with the beginning of hope. Logan came the next day.
Laris didn't mind seeing him alone and openly. Dedran was still
happy for her to learn all she could from Logan. The boy laughed
as he explained his early visit. "Storm says I'd forget my
head if it wasn't screwed on. I forgot to give you the official
hard copy report on your family." He sobered. "Listen, Laris. You
know who your parents were. Aylaris Trehannan was your father. He
and your mother combined names for you." "Which may mean I was their
first child?" "It's likely. You don't
remember any other smaller kid with you?" Laris shook her head. "I
don't remember much of anything about my mother. I told Mr.
Quade. I think I was about five or six when she died." "According to this report
your father must have died at least two years before that. There
may not have been any other children. There was no trace of him
in the two camps before your mother died. But in that last one
Brad found your father's name listed as deceased. It sounds as if
your mother knew how he died and had given the authorities the
information so it could be correctly listed along with her, and
your, details." "But will Brad find anything
more? That's the question." Logan snorted. "You don't
know my father. Once he's on a trail he's relentless. If there's
anything at all he'll find it." The girl took a deep breath.
She'd thought about this all night and had talked it over with
Prauo. She would gamble now with both their futures, trusting
that what Tani and Storm had offered earlier was true. Logan
liked her, maybe he'd see that promises made to her were
kept. "I have to tell you this,
Logan. You know I'm bonded to Dedran?" He nodded silently,
waiting. "He's made me break laws for him. Me and Prauo. We've
had to do burglaries. He said that I'd obey him or he'd take
Prauo away. When I still argued he said he'd sell Prauo to an
arena, or kill him for his skin. I couldn't let him do that." Her
mouth trembled. "I always planned to get
away. Prauo stole credits he found on some of those jobs and gave
them to me. Sometimes Dedran threw me a few part-credits as well.
We've saved for years. I've enough saved now to manage for a
while once the bond ends and I'm free." She shivered, waiting.
"Do you hate me?" Logan remembered the things
Brad had said. Bits and pieces about the De Pyall camps. One
night he'd mused aloud, and quite graphically, on what it must
have been like for a small girl left alone, shifted from camp to
camp, struggling to survive. To Logan it sounded like horror. He
could only marvel that Laris had survived and done so with her
courage intact. He reached out, curled her into the circle of one
arm, and looked down into deep brown eyes. "I don't hate you. Brad told
me some of what it must have been like in the camps. Even after
all that you could find a half-dead cub and love him back to
life. Care so much you'd do things you hated to keep him safe.
Dedran's a lousy clicker." A flash of amusement showed
in the eyes which surveyed him. "More than that. He's guild, I
think." "Is he? Versha would be interested in
that. No," he corrected as she startled. "We'll keep that quiet.
But if all this falls apart it might help get her on our side."
He hugged her hard. "Go and do your show. I'll see you
afterward." They spent time together later as she cared for the
animals. Once he'd gone she vanished to check Surra. Cregar would
be taking care of the other hidden beasts. In a secret room Cregar
cradled meercat babies again, his heart filling with love. Hing
blinked sleepily at him. The babies scrambled, churred, and
trilled affectionately, ending up in a jumble in his lap. His
hands slid over small, firm, warm bodies. The faint mind-touches
from them were growing stronger. If battle-fortune favored him,
in a few more weeks he would have part of a team again. At least
two of the babies would accept him as their beast
master. His conscious mind worried
at the problems they faced. Baris and Ideena were gone. But
Larash-Ti was more energetic than ever. Dedran seemed to have no
idea of how to deal with events. Worse, the local Thieves Guild
patrons complained that all the peacekeeper activity was
inhibiting their business. It wouldn't take much more before the
local patrons leaned on Nhara to close the circus and provide a
scapegoat. Also Cregar had found a
reason why Dedran seemed so smug about lack of proof. It wasn't
that it didn't exist as of now. But when he wished it to stop
existing it would. Cregar didn't like that idea. Not considering
what it meant. He'd come into this business on a promise and a
belief. It looked as if the promise was hollow. The belief was
possible but without the promise, he'd still have little. So
where did that leave him? He could think of answers to that
question and he didn't like them any better. He should act. But he wasn't
sure which direction was the best way to jump. He'd wait a while
longer. Observe, be ready. Keep an eye on the kid and her cat
too. He didn't want them hurt and Dedran was a great believer in
clearing away loose ends. Cregar stroked the meercats and allowed
his mind to run free, to a time long ago when he'd been more than
he was. When one had been many and many one. The enemy had
slaughtered his team and Terran Command had refused him another.
They'd claimed not to have enough beasts but he was sure they'd
lied. Driven by need he'd done
something stupid and after that there was no chance for him to
ever regain what he'd had. Then Terra was gone, and, as he'd
feared, all hope of a second team with it. If he could have
remembered how to pray he'd have prayed then. To have back, even
for an hour, what togetherness had once been his. Belief, hope,
consciousness faded. He slept as the furred ones snuggled
close. Chapter
Seventeen Two days later Storm woke to
an urgent beeping. He rolled over and peered at the wall chrono.
Great Spirit. It was barely four in the morning. What message had
that importance? He touched the comunit to life and mumbled at
it. The unit squawked cheerily in response. "Up and awake, my lad. I'll
be with you in ten minutes bearing news." "Versha?" "The same. Move it." The
unit clicked off and she was gone. Storm groaned as beside him
Tani stirred. "I heard that," she said
sleepily. Her eyes cleared as she sat up. She focused on the
time. "Better do as she said. If it wasn't important she wouldn't
have woken us this early after such a late night." She yawned
widely. "Last night was worth it though. I enjoyed
myself." Storm could only agree.
They'd gone to a place Anders knew. It served lightly frothed
fruit drinks, tart and delightful to the tongue. The
entertainment was provided by one of the allied alien races, a
team of half a dozen who sang, juggled, and ran a very clever and
amusing beast show. Afterward Storm and Tani had stayed a while
talking to them and swapping animal tales. They'd had a wonderful
time even if they had only returned three hours before Versha had
woken them again. Tani was moving swiftly,
brushing her hair and watching the time as she hurried into her
clothes. Storm followed suit. It was just on the promised ten
minutes that both appeared from their room to meet Logan erupting
blearily from his. "Awake too, little
brother?" Logan surveyed him
indignantly. "If that's what you'd call it. Do you know, Versha
woke me just now and it's only four A.M." He sagged dramatically
and gave a hollow moan. "I'm not used to this. It's too much of a
shock to my system. I need restoring." Storm's eyes were amused.
Tani laughed. "You two. You'd think that you'd never been up this
early before. At home you're often awake and away by
dawn." "Very true," Logan assured
her. "But not after we'd only gotten to bed three hours
earlier. If I'm riding at four I'm in bed by eight or nine. I
like a decent length of sleep. This had better be worth
it." "I suspect it will be."
Storm sobered. "Versha wouldn't wake us this early unless it was
something important." He headed for the small kitchen attached to
the suite. "I'll start drinks. Swankee for everyone?" He gathered
the nods and began to spoon the powder into mugs. They heard
Versha run up the stairs as he passed around the steaming
drinks. "Up and awake. Good. That
swankee? Great. Give me a cup, sit down, and I'll tell you a few
things." She was all quick movement, her eyes glowing as she
accepted the swankee and spread papers on the small table. The
others sat and allowed her to begin as they sipped the hot
chocolate-tasting drink quietly. "First thing. Those tigerbat
samples that Logan got us, Lereyne contacted me directly about
them a couple of hours ago. The pair checked were definitely
obtained illegally. Samples indicated that the animals are the
offspring of two of the tigerbats held in the reserve. The
reserve people say that their records list when the animals went
missing. At the time it was feared they had strayed somehow from
the reserve. "As you may know, the
reserve there is in mountain foothills. An apparently natural
break in the force-field fence was found and the reserve staff
thought the young tigerbats had escaped and vanished into the
mountains. They could find no trace of them but hoped they'd turn
up when they matured sexually and came back to look for a swarm.
It looks instead as if the pair were darted and stolen. Possibly
the swarm was sleep-gassed and this pair chosen to order. Lereyne
wants them back. If Dedran can prove he purchased them
legally from the thieves without knowing the beasts were stolen,
then he'll be compensated." "If he didn't and we march
in, they'll guess somebody's talked. I don't want Laris blamed."
Logan was worried. Versha grinned. "Quite true
and I have no wish to get the girl into trouble. I'll go. You can
be there already just visiting. But I have the readout for the
tigerbats DNA records from Lereyne. I plan to say that Lereyne
has heard of the tigerbats, insists on DNA matching because
tigerbats have been stolen, and that I'll have all of them
cross-matched on patrol authority. I shall be very official when
this pair show up as matching reserve records." "Is that it?" "No, I'm afraid it isn't."
She sat fingering a sheaf of papers. "Storm, you were a beast
master, and Tani, you were involved at the beast master breeding
and recuperation center to some extent before you left Terra. Do
either of you remember a man called Jason Regan? He was a beast
master whose team was killed by the Xiks. He returned to Terran
Beast Master Command but at the time they were short of beasts
for new teams. They said he would have to wait but apparently he
didn't want to do that." She snorted in exasperation. "Instead the idiot convinced
a trainee to try some trick called meshing. It was supposed to
enable both humans to control the one team. They failed, the
trainee died, and Regan's abilities were partially burned out.
Regan was court-martialed but the court decided that the trainee
had acted as he did of his own free will, and there wasn't any
specific law to prevent Regan from doing as he'd done. However he
was discharged, he left the service, and disappeared." Tani wrinkled her forehead.
"I remember hearing talk when I was small about what a dangerous
thing it was to do that. I don't think I ever heard that
name." "Storm?" He nodded reluctantly. "I
didn't have much to do with him. He was older. Like Tani's
father. They took beast masters where they could find them during
the Xik war and there were never many with the beast master
abilities. I did hear about Regan though. There was a rumor at
the time that meshing could open you right up. Give you a team
channel which was twice as good. Someone was supposed to have
done it and got that result, so this pair tried and Regan was
burned out." "What does that mean
exactly?" "They weren't sure," Storm
said slowly. "At the time it meant that Regan couldn't touch any
of the beasts mentally. He couldn't keep working as a beast
master. They thought that the channel might heal in time. You
have to know, Versha. All this was experimental. It was war, they
couldn't keep him and hope that in five or ten years he might be
useful again. They offered him a commission in another unit. He
refused. There was talk that he'd suffered some brain damage in
the memory areas. He resigned from the unit and before they could
conscript him somewhere else or order treatment he was gone." He
waved at her papers. "Do they have any more?" "Yes, and it's interesting.
They finally discovered that he's been with Dedran's circus most
of the time. Calling himself Jas Cregar. The surnames are just
similar-sounding enough that he'd learn to reply quickly. Not
give himself away. The few family records we've accessed from his
time in the unit say that he came from Ishan. His grandparents
emigrated there from Britain with the third settler
wave. "His parents had a daughter
about ten years younger than Regan. No record of what happened to
the family but they're all likely dead. As you know, Ishan was
overrun by Xiks about fourteen years back. Most of the men and a
lot of the single women died holding off the Xiks to get the
other women and kids clear. The remaining defenders died when
Ishan was incinerated. So this Regan probably has no family we
can use to appeal to him to help." She grimaced. "We may need help. I've
talked to patrol HQ. They've had a man in the guild this last
couple of years. We've likely lost him now. He's gone silent. But
before that he was able to reports rumors in the guild that a
patron called Nhara has a scam going. What it is he's never found
out but there have been hints the guild initially expected great
things from it and it involves animals." "The circus," Tani said.
"They have illegal animals. They have a burned-out beast master.
Logan says Laris told him Dedran could get fake papers for any
animal if he wanted them. Is there anything else which could
point to the circus?" Versha picked out a paper with care and
handed it to her. Tani read and handed it on so that Storm and
Logan read it, heads together. Then they all looked at
Versha. "It isn't proof, my Arzoran
friends. But yes. They found a tiny scrap of Terevian peavine on
Baris's clothing. And the only place we could find that is
currently using that is the circus. They use it as animal bedding
because it's lighter than many other forms of bedding and it's
edible for the animals in an emergency. Of course there's nothing
to say Baris and Ideena weren't animal lovers, or fond of the
circus and went to watch the show. But it's another
clue." Logan was thinking
furiously. They had more than clues. Laris had told him she
believed a guild patron was involved with Dedran and the circus.
Dedran had her and Prauo burgling for him. And she'd opened up
further about that the next night, once she'd seen he didn't
condemn her. It looked as if Dedran was into stealing industrial
secrets for resale. If the description of some of the items he'd
had Laris and Prauo steal for him was accurate, such thefts could
also tie into the guild. He didn't want to hurt or betray Laris,
but this could be a chance for her and Prauo to get away. He
spoke quietly. "It's more than a clue.
Laris talked to me after I told her her parent's names. Versha,
she's terrified Dedran would manage to hold title to her cat.
That he'd use the chance to kill it and punish her if he even
suspected she'd talk. He's been using her to commit crimes by
threatening to torture and kill Prauo in front of her. If you can
get her clear with the cat and get her clear title to the beast
she could give you a lot." "Would she come in and talk
to me?" "No, not unless she was sure
Prauo was safe first." Versha sat thinking. "I was
going to raid the circus for the tigerbats. What if, as an
apparent afterthought, we collect the girl and her cat as well?
Anders could say that we want to check her and the cat because
there had been a minor outbreak of disease elsewhere which may
have been started by a similar animal. Once we have her clear we
should be able to sort something out. If she talks and her
information's good we can hit the circus again with a full-scale
raid. Anders would be happy to supply the men." She
chuckled. "He's still so mad about
losing Baris and Ideena you can see steam coming from his ears
when he thinks about it. We can take the tigerbats, the girl, and
the cat, using just a couple of Anders's men, and get the
animals and the girl out before Dedran knows that's what we're
after. It should work if we make it clear we're confiscating
animals suspected of being illegally on Trastor, and that so far
as the girl and cat are concerned, National Disease Control is in
charge. Logan, you find the girl. Tell her the idea. I don't want
her thinking we're going to take her cat away for real and having
her panic. Okay?" "I'll go as soon as they'll
be about. That's around seven." "Good. I'll go and talk to
Anders. Tani, I suggest you and Storm wander along to the circus
around midday. That's when we'll hit them. It could be useful to
have you there. Logan, don't tell the girl anything more than
we're getting her and the cat out in payment for talking freely
to the patrol. She isn't to know about Baris and Ideena,
peavines, or a later raid. Understand?" He nodded agreement.
"Right. I'll see you all in a few hours." She hurried away, the papers
clutched in one long-fingered brown hand. She also wanted more
information on this Regan's background. If they could turn him
into an informant she knew they'd find out enough to make a real
dent in the guild. Storm stood, Tani joining
him as they headed for their room to dress for the outdoors.
Logan was behind them. He'd dress properly then get something
light to eat. He couldn't manage a real breakfast, he was too
excited. He'd grab a snack, then make for the circus. At seven Laris would be
cleaning the animals' cages. She'd be busy with that for a couple
of hours. The other staff had their own work and she'd be alone
for most of that time. He'd showed up a number of times to help
and just spend the time with her. No one would think it odd. But
with no one around he could tell her not to worry, explain what
was to happen, have her prepared to walk in at just the right
moment with Prauo and be scooped up and away before Dedran could
prevent it. Laris was terrified of what
her owner might do if he had any reason to believe she'd talked
about his affairs. But then from some of the things she'd
confided, Dedran was indeed both violent and a killer if he
thought he was threatened. Logan wasn't exactly terrified of the
man, but he did share Laris's belief that Dedran, cornered, would
be very dangerous. As for Cregar, Laris had
made it plain the man had been a half-friend to her and Prauo.
For that Logan was ready to hope the man wasn't involved. He ate
slowly, thinking of how best to handle his actions at the circus,
then, after clearing away the debris of his meal, he summoned a
hovercab. It dropped him at the entrance to the roped-off circus
area. The circus tents showed pale against the early sky as Logan
made his way unobtrusively to the animal lines and found Laris
sweeping. She looked up and her face broke into a wide, happy
smile. "Heyla. Come to
help?" "To help and to talk." There
was a tone to that which warned her. She stepped to the cage
door, glancing about. "I know where Cregar is. And
at this hour Dedran will be doing last night's receipts over
breakfast. He won't be outside for another hour. If you help me
do the next few cages we can stand where I can watch for anyone
and we can talk. That way if Dedran or Cregar turn up I won't be
behind with the work." They worked industriously for half an
hour. With the work well ahead of schedule Logan drew her to one
side. She checked down the line of cages and nodded. "No one in sight. What is
it, Logan? It's important, isn't it?" "Yes." He caught her small
hands up against his cheek. "Listen to what I'm saying, love, and
don't interrupt yet. First, we all know about Dedran using you
and Prauo to steal. No!" he warned when her face whitened.
"Listen to me, I had to tell them, but Storm spent time in one of
the camps once as part of an undercover job. He knows what
they're like. Brad worked with people who came to Arzor from the
camp on Meril. We all understand that you had to get out and just
how Dedran forced you to steal. You didn't have a choice, he
owned you, he could kill Prauo, beat you half to death, and no
one would prevent it." Her shoulders hunched slowly
as she half-turned from him. Logan reached out to pull her back
into the curve of his arm. "I'm telling you, Laris. We understand
how you had to get out of the camp, then how you had to
obey Dedran. You've done a lot of reading, you know the law on a
bond-servant. You acted as you did to save your life and if it
came to a court they'd accept that." "What about
Prauo?" "I have Versha's word that
he will stay with you." Laris eyed him with a
flicker of hope. "Can she keep that promise—and will she keep it?" "Oh yes. Versha's word is
good, and on Arzor she's the patrol's assistant security head for
the planet." Laris's eyes widened. "Then
she can say that, but you're certain she's agreed?" Logan met her gaze, willing
her with all his heart to trust him. "I swear!" he said slowly.
"Storm had her write out a note of agreement saying you could
keep Prauo just so long as it was proved you were the closest
person to an owner he has. I saw the letter and read it, my word
on that." Prauo's mind voice cut in
then. *He speaks the truth as he knows it, I would trust
him.* *I think I do,* Laris
thought back, then she spoke aloud to Logan: "How do I prove
Prauo is mine, though?" "You told me once you'd do
anything for Prauo. You may need to accept deep-probe to prove
Prauo is yours. Can you do that?" Laris took a deep breath and
let it out raggedly. "I can do it. What else do you want me to
do?" "A couple of men from the
Endangered Species Conservation Unit here will be arriving around
midday. They will have a warrant to take the tigerbats. Once it's
proved the two females are stolen property the whole swarm will
be confiscated to be returned to the sanctuary on Lereyne. At the
same time other people from the National Disease Control will
collect you and Prauo. If anyone asks, they'll be claiming they
need to test you both." "Why?" Logan grinned. "Because, as
they'll tell Dedran if he asks, there's been an outbreak of a
disease on another planet which may have been caught from a
cat-like creature similar to Prauo. Disease Control wants to
check out the two of you in case." "What if Dedran doesn't want
to let me go, Logan? He knows I could tell too much for his
safety; he might try to stop them from taking me." "Can you have Prauo make a
fuss if they try to take him without you?" Eyes opened again in the
back of her head. *I will do that, furless-sister. I'll be so
ferocious without you to calm me, they will insist on taking you
with them.* Laris smiled. "Prauo will do
that if I signal him. Tell Versha to be ready." "I'll make sure she knows."
He picked up a broom again. "Let me help you finish. Just in case
you can't get back to the circus for a while you might want to
sneak off in a few minutes and have a bit of time to do
things." Laris smiled at him,
relaxing. She had to admit that when he started this discussion
she'd wondered. Almost all of her life she'd been used and she'd
been afraid this was what would happen again here. But she
trusted Logan, he was doing his best for her, and his family and
their friends knew about her, all about her, and they still
accepted her, understanding she'd done only what was necessary
for her to survive and save Prauo. Logan was right too, a
little time now would be useful. She didn't want to leave her
small hoard behind. If Dedran ran he'd run with the ship if he
could—and her stash would go with him.
Apart from her savings she didn't really have anything worth
taking—except her ring, and once she'd
told all she could to Versha, she'd have to give that back to the
Quades. Cregar passed just then with
a nod to her, and Laris, her senses quick with her years in the
camps, noticed the odd way Logan looked at the man before he was
out of sight. She knew that look. It said, "I know something
about you." She wondered what Logan
could know and that brought another thought to mind. Cregar. He'd
been kind to her. Saved her from Baris, trusted her over his own
hoard while he was gone. She should warn him. If Logan knew
something about the man then she'd guess the patrol did too. They
could arrest him as well. He might prefer they didn't. And what
about Storm and Tani's beasts? She swept so hard as she mulled
over her options that Logan grinned. "You'll wear out the cage
floor." "Less to sweep if I do," she
laughed back. The work was almost done when Dedran appeared. He
eyed Logan and grunted. No skin off his nose if the stupid kid
wanted to work for free. "Laris, we'll use the carras
on the trapeze with you in the afternoon performance. I'm
switching that act with Jonran and his
knife-throwing." "Why?" Laris asked in
surprise. The act had been popular. "The idiot was practicing
this morning to add knife-juggling. He missed. He'll be out a
while. I told him to pack his bags. We don't have time for fools
who play about and leave me short-handed with the acts." He
turned on his heel. "And don't forget the costumes." Laris took the opportunity.
"Logan, I have to go." Her voice lowered. "I'll see you around
midday. I'll have Prauo with me. We'll be cleaning a cage by the
tigerbats. That way I'll be just where Versha can see me." He
hugged her quickly and left to tell the patrol officer all was
arranged. Laris promptly darted in another direction. She found
Cregar where she'd expected, just leaving the hidden cage with
the meercats. She slid unobtrusively past, speaking to him in the
soft slurred speech of the camps. Her lips were slightly parted
but remained unmoving. "Got'a talk. Danger
you." Cregar strolled in another
direction, circled, and met her behind the cage line. "What danger me?" Now he
could speak more clearly but in his worry he'd reverted to
underworld brevity. Laris answered in kind.
"Patrol comes. Logan say they know tigerbat illegals. Reclaim
they. Take me 'n' Prauo too. Logan not say but think me he know
something 'bout you. Look at you odd you pass us. Maybe you
somewhere else sun-high." Cregar sucked in a breath.
Let the girl go and she'd talk. Looked as if it was over for
Dedran. But the animals—Dedran had plans for them Cregar
had never liked. His hands remembered the feel of small, warm,
trusting meercat bodies. Of the first tiny itching of his
mind-channels reopening. The meercats hadn't bonded to him as yet
although there were signs they could, and might choose him if
they did. But now at least he knew his ability had been only
burned out for a few years. It could be brought back. Yet with
what? He remembered his team. Las
and Lara, the mongeese. Keeroo, the Aubearan falcon. And Mali,
the dune-cat, so like the sick beast in the hidden cage. He felt
again the love flow across the bond. The trust, the place where
oneness was. He'd loved them all. Mali had been half his heart,
Las and Lara his laughter, Keeroo his eyes. With them gone he'd
lost heart, laughter, and that inner vision. Laris waited patiently as he
pondered. Finally he turned to her. His eyes were different, she
thought. It was as if life had flowed in to break the ice of
indifference. Even his voice had changed. There was a clean snap
to it, the slurring forgotten. "Tell the patrol about the
hidden cages. Warn them. I can't just open the cages and let the
beasts go, there are reasons. And Dedran has the cages rigged to
explode, destroy any evidence. I'll try to defuse that. Tell
them, mount a full raid at midday. I'll try to be done in
time." "What about you?" His smile was sad. "It's too
late for me. You get out clean, girl. Take your cat and be free.
I'll do my best for the animals. Tell the patrol to be careful in
case I couldn't get all the hidden cages cleared." He walked away
abruptly, leaving Laris standing there. Well, she'd told him. She
bit her lip nervously. This business about the cages upset her
badly. She didn't know much about such things. Surely Cregar was wrong; he
could simply open the cages, the meercats would run out as soon
as the door was opened and Storm called them. The same with the
coyotes. It would take only seconds for them to be safe. But not
Surra. The big cat was weakened by months of drugs, illness, and
her original injuries. She'd almost died but somehow Laris had
helped her cling to life. Cregar would have to clear
Surra's cage first. But could he? On the other side of the circus
Cregar was thinking he shouldn't take that risk. Surra's cage was
right at the end of the line. Dedran could see it from his office
tent. No, better to clear the other two cages first. Then if
Dedran saw him he could maybe hold the man off long enough to
save the dune-cat. The others would already be safe. He checked the time. Not
long. The cages had been cunningly rigged with the explosives. To
clear both would take much of the time remaining before the
patrol came calling. Cregar slid under the cage housing the
meercats and began to work with hands suddenly deft. Yes, one cut
here, slip this part from that. He'd been well trained by the
unit once. It came back to him as he worked. Laris would wonder
why he didn't just let the beasts go. Dedran had been smarter than
that. Tied into the circuits in the hidden sections of the cages
was an electronic nerve-field. Dedran had these activated on the
three cages holding the meercats, coyotes, and Surra. People
could walk through the fields without registering their
existence. A beast which tried suffered agony, dying from a burst
heart. Dedran had the key to shut that off. Cregar did not. To
get them out he'd have to disable the entire system or the pain
would almost certainly kill the beasts. It was a failsafe against
escape or theft. He worked on, sweat beads starting on his skin.
One wrong move and he'd go sky-high. But so would the beasts, and
even as he sweated, his hands kept working. He cleared the circuits
under the meercats. Best to leave them be. If he let them out now
they might be seen and Dedran alerted. He inched along under the
low cage until he reached the coyotes' prison. There he worked
again feverishly. It was taking time, so much time. But now he
knew how it went and he was a little faster. He glanced at his
watch. Thirty minutes to midday. In her suite at the patrol
offices Versha was looking at information flow. Her investigator
at Ideena and Baris's ship had cracked not only a very
well-hidden safe in the ship wall but also the coded disks
inside. Very interesting. More material had come from High
Command. The last items from Regan's service file. A name in them
was somehow familiar. Where had she heard it? She shrugged. No
time to sit about wondering. Storm was reading the hard copy of
the file over her shoulder. It meant more to him than to her and
his eyes widened slightly. It was twenty-five minutes to
midday. In his office tent Dedran
was considering recent events. It looked as if the patrol could
be closing in on him. Nhara had sent a message. They'd found a
spy in the guild. The man was dead by his own hand, too quickly
for the guild experts to drain from him what may have been
spilled. It might be safer if Dedran simply upped-ship. The
Queen of the Circus was largely automatic. Liftoff at
least could be done by one person alone. But first he'd stroll
around the midway. See if there were any indications that he was
being watched. He checked the time. Twenty minutes to
midday. Versha was on her way now
with a six-peacekeeper squad, Anders, and Jared. In a hovercar
behind rode Tani with Storm and Logan. They reached the midway,
slipped into the crowd, and tried to blend in. Logan's gaze
flicked about in search of Laris. He saw her with the tigerbats,
Prauo sitting in the next cage, the door ajar. She saw them and
nodded, leaving the cage to stand by Prauo, the big cat leaning
against her shoulder. Under the coyotes' prison
Cregar sighed and slumped. One cage to go. He waited until the
aisle between cages was empty of people, dashed across, and dived
beneath the final cage. Above him Surra's ears flickered. She'd
heard a sound. She could feel danger—and also in her mind there was
the growing feel of her human getting closer. She was weak but
not quite as weak as her warders thought. She dragged herself to
lie by the door. Something was telling her Storm was near. She
would be ready. Cregar worked, hands
flashing through the motion needed to defuse the cage. For Mali
whom he'd loved. A parade of the dead and dying passed through
behind his eyes as he worked. All the beast masters who'd fought
Dedran's men. The beasts who accepted death rather than live
without their human team member. At first, locked in his
agony of aloneness he hadn't cared. Had even been glad in a small
mean way that they too should share his pain. But with the girl's
arrival things had begun to change. She reminded him of someone;
who that had been he couldn't remember. Only that he'd cared
about her. He'd tried to stay aloof from Laris. But he'd diverted
Dedran's anger or punishment from her more often than she knew.
It felt right. Then they came, Hing and her
babies, and at last he felt something touch his mind and heart
again. But each time he held them, felt channels open a fraction
further, he felt as well the guilt for what he'd done. With
emotion and earlier memories and teaching returning, he knew the
pain he'd caused. Now his guilt for the things he helped Dedran
do was all but unbearable. Superstitiously he feared that his
returning gifts would be taken again if he made no
repayment. Maybe if he could save
these, it would be counted for him. He could have his team again.
He goaded his hands to motion. Faster. He had to finish and be
away from here before anyone knew what he'd done. Boots halted
beside the cage. In a soft, deadly voice Dedran spoke. "Cregar? Care to tell me
what you're doing under there?" Chapter
Eighteen Cregar worked on for a
moment before he replied. He could only think of one
thing. "I quit, Dedran." "Do you indeed? But you know
guild rules, once in—never out. If you didn't like it
you shouldn't have joined." Let the man keep talking,
Cregar hoped. Let him tell me how clever he's been, how stupid I
am. Anything. Just so long as I have time to finish this. Dedran
didn't do the wiring himself. He had it done. If I finish he
won't be able to repair it. The animals will live. Dedran dropped to one knee,
looking at what those racing hands had accomplished. He knew more
than this idiot believed he knew. Well, well, he thought. So the
fool really was trying to save the beasts. He chuckled
patronizingly. "A pity you've wasted all
the work. But there's a dead-man switch with each of the special
cages. Too bad. And a dead man should go with it. You can't quit,
Cregar. I'm firing you." He produced the tiny deadly needier he
carried and pressed the trigger button. Cregar arched in agony as
the spray of minute missiles struck. Then he slumped. On Versha's watch, the
display finally ticked over to show midday. Dedran bent to peer under
the cage. Blood all over, the needle's scorch in the chest. That
was the end of a traitor. He straightened, resolved that it was
definitely time to depart. If this wasn't a warning he didn't
know what was. He'd go to the ship, close it up quietly, and lift
before anyone including the port officials realized what he was
doing. The circus had served its purpose. He could blame the traitor
the guild had found in its own ranks for any failure of his own
and Nhara's plans. He strolled toward the ship and was out of the
beast cage rows before something made him slow to stare around.
That was odd. The usual crowds were missing. They'd been there
half an hour ago when he'd come out to walk the midway. Where had
they gone in that time? He advanced cautiously. At the gates two
peacekeepers turned back those who would have entered. Those who
left stayed out. In the half hour Dedran had been oblivious to
this, almost all of the people wandering the sideshows and animal
cages had departed. At midday most planned to be home and were
ready to seek the gates. The time of the raid had been chosen for
that reason. With Laris's information Anders had made a decision.
He'd have the midway clear. He wanted no list of dead civilians
if a cage was accidentally triggered. Twice, circus people
noticing the odd emptying of the midway had sought out Dedran to
mention it. Each time they'd missed him. The first had looked in
the office tent and gone away muttering. The other circus
employee had missed seeing Dedran as he moved between the cages.
That second man had felt a warning chill down his own neck,
gathered his meager gear, and sought the gates. The peacekeeper
presence had reinforced his decision to be elsewhere while
something was happening. He faded into the watching crowd by the
gates and left hastily. At the far side of the cages
Laris waited with Prauo. Logan stood with her. Storm walked up to
them briskly. "Versha says that's most of
the civilians out of the area." He turned to look up at Laris
where she sat in the cage doorway. "My team. What do you know
about them?" She looked away, her voice a
whisper. "I'm sorry. I was too afraid for Prauo to tell you
before. Are you sure they have Dedran?" "Not yet but they will." He
frowned. "He was seen only a short time ago. He's still here.
Don't worry, Laris, Anders will arrest Dedran the minute he's
seen. So, talk to us. Where are my team?" "In secret cages. Some of
the bigger ones have special hidden compartments." "Show me!" he commanded.
Tani had arrived in time to hear much of this. She took Laris's
freezing hands in hers, rubbing them gently. The girl was still
so afraid of her owner, Laris needed to feel secure, to be
soothed a little. "Don't be afraid. We're all
here. I promise, Laris, Dedran won't come near you, Storm will
protect you. Are my coyotes unhurt? What about Surra and Hing and
the babies?" "Hing and the babies are all
right. The babies are growing and everything. Your coyotes are
fine, Tani. They were mad at me but I made sure they had good
food and clean water. I kept Dedran away from them." Tears began
trickling down her face. "Surra was so badly injured when they
stole her. I kept her alive. I kept telling her that Storm would
come for her. That I'd save her. I wouldn't let her die. She's in
this end cage." Storm would have looked
under the cage for the circuits. Laris pressed the back panel in
the sequence which opened it. Before anyone could prevent it,
Surra fell out into Storm's arms. She was skin and bone with
wasted muscles and fur roughened by her illness, but she was
alive. Tani was stooping by the cage. "What's this? Storm, look
here. Someone's been hurt. There's blood and a lot of
it." Prauo had leaned around Tani
and sniffed. *Cregar, sister. He dies. Dedran shot him, I think.
I follow the blood-trail.* Laris gulped. "Storm. Prauo
says Dedran shot Cregar. Cregar must have been defusing the
cages. He said he would. We have to find them both. Cregar's hurt
bad, Prauo says. And Dedran may do something awful
still." Storm was judging
disconnected circuits with a knowing eye. "This one was cleared
all right, and a job well done too. Let me check the next one
before you open it, Laris." Dedran had left quietly.
With no crowd to provide cover he had slipped along the cage row
and then darted behind the sideshow tents. Behind him Cregar
stirred. The other beasts—still in danger, and the kid too.
He knew she'd come first to try to rescue the animals. He forced
leaden arms up to where the last circuits remained working under
Surra's prison. The deadman circuit was easily disarmed. Thanks
be that Dedran couldn't resist boasting. Its greater danger lay
in not knowing it was there. Better not to emerge or try
to stand. He dragged himself back under the cages and disarmed
the switch beneath Minou and Ferarre. There. One last cage to go,
then he could rest. It was strange. He'd been sure it was earlier
in the day. But it seemed to be growing dark. Not that it
mattered. Laris would come for the beasts soon. He must have them
ready. He crawled, his breath tearing at his throat. Laris was ahead, Prauo
trotting now, tracing that painful trail and relaying it to the
girl. *He grows weaker, sister. I
think he dies. But he has some purpose. He goes toward the third
cage now.* Tani had released the
coyotes who frisked about her, leaping to nuzzle her hands. They
sent satisfaction that they were free, assurances that both were
well, and that neither had been ill-treated. The human female
with the strange cat had been kind to them. In the midway Prauo
gathered speed as he followed Cregar's trail; Laris raced after
him ahead of the others. Storm, carrying Surra and distracted by
Tani's reunion with her coyotes, was well back when Prauo
realized where Cregar was headed. The girl vanished from Storm's
sight as she dived between two large cages in a
shortcut. Cregar reached the last cage
and stared along the ground. He felt the vibrations of someone
coming. He peered out in time to see Prauo appear at the end of
the cage row. Where the cat was, the girl would not be far
behind. The last cage—it was still wired to that final
circuit! She would try to free the meercats. He would be left
watching as she and the small ones who'd trusted him died,
smeared bloodily across the midway when the deadman's switch took
its toll. She was coming. He saw the
small figure trot forward. Storm had rounded the cage some
distance away, Tani and Logan at his heels. They saw a terrible
figure appear then. Swaying, covered in blood, both new and
part-dried, Cregar rolled from under the cage and forced himself
to his feet. His eyes blurred as Laris moved toward him. His
sister. She was coming. His small, much loved sister. He couldn't
let her die. Terror for her accessed the
last of his strength as he tore open the cage panel. He leaned in
scooping up the sleep basket in which Hing was feeding her
babies. In his fear for them he was sending. Hing read the
message, *Lie still! Danger!* and she chittered the babies into a
frozen stillness in his arms. Cregar paused a fraction of
a second, then leaped backward with them. They passed through the
alarm circuit. With it shut down there was no pain for the
meercats. But the circuit noted they had left, the switch
triggered, and the cage blew up in a great smashing explosion.
Cregar had known it would. Even as he leaped he had spun,
cradling the trusting meercats in his arms, his back hunched over
them, his own flesh and bone between them and harm as he flung
himself forward. One pace, another—then the explosion came and he
fell. He went down still curled
about the startled meercats. The scythe of splinters slashed
across the alley of cages but it met only their backs. Further
down the row Prauo had read Cregar's knowledge in the last second
and dived at Laris. They rolled entangled beneath a cage. Storm,
carrying Surra, with Tani and Logan beside him, had been far
enough back to miss the deadly spray. Now they came running as
Laris and Prauo crawled out. "Are you hurt?" "No." Laris brushed him off.
"Cregar, Cregar?" She reached the fallen man and would have
turned him over but Storm had laid down his cat and now he caught
the girl's hands. "Don't. You could make the
injuries worse." Hing squirmed chittering from under Cregar and
scampered to her human. The babies followed. Storm scooped them
up and handed them gently to Tani. Then he knelt, his hands
checking with the experience of many battlefields. Cregar opened
weary eyelids and gazed up at the blurred figure. "Deadman ... tied to ...
kill-bar circuit." Hing returned, patting his bloody face with
small anxious paws. Cregar's memory turned back. "Las? Lara?" He
appealed to Storm. "My team ... are they ... okay?" "They are unhurt," Storm
said steadily. The man was dying. Whatever sins he'd committed,
so far as Storm was concerned, he'd paid for them with the lives
of Hing and her family. "Rest easy, beast master. You saved them
all. You've done well." "Shal?" Cregar could see
only a blur of light now. "Little ... sister ... Shal. I love ...
Shal?" Laris was holding his
groping hand in hers, tears pouring down her face. This was the
one who'd saved her from Baris. The only one who'd been kind to
her since she joined the circus. He'd saved the animals. Her grip
brought him back a little. His gaze cleared and he knew
her. "Laris? My cache, yours."
His eyes turned desperately to Storm. "You witness.
Hers!" "I witness. Whatever you
have is to go to Shallaris Trehannan." He saw the man's eyes open
in amazement. Storm nodded to the frantic question in these eyes.
"Yes. She is. You saved her." Cregar forced out the final
words. "Good girl... not blame." He fell mute, appealing to
Storm. "We know. I'll see she's all
right, beast master, it's Dedran who'll pay." Cregar heard the
words. It was good. All good now. He'd saved his own blood
unknowingly. Saved his team, saved his heart, laughter, the inner
vision by which a beast master lived. Darkness was coming. Time
for Jason Regan Trehannan and his team to hunt. He could see
them. They were around him, with him. He could feel their minds
holding him up. Storm was silent, waiting.
He saw the body stiffen a little, then as the eyes became blank
windows staring up, it seemed to slump and flatten. Storm had
seen it often enough. The man was gone, his spirit fled for
judgment. Well, at the last Cregar had paid blood price. May the
faraway gods open the Warrior Path to him. Hing pattered back to Storm,
swarmed up his pants leg, and cuddled close. Laris was on her
knees still holding the limp hand. Logan was beside her. Tani,
her arms full of meercat babies, was standing at Storm's back
when a voice spoke. "How charming. Now which of
you is going to walk me to my ship?" Dedran smiled at them,
needier rock-steady in one hand. Prauo appeared from under the
cage behind him and departed the ground in one soaring
black-and-gold leap. He landed, claws slashing away the needier.
Dedran yelled as they included a generous amount of skin with
that blow. Taken unaware and off-balance from the impact of
almost eighty pounds of cat, he fell backward. The big cat landed
sitting across the recumbent body. Delicately he flexed claws,
laid them across Dedran's eyes, and waited, watching Laris.
*Sister? It will not keep him from talking to those who would
hear.* She hesitated. It would be
sweet. The patrol could still drain the man of everything,
deep-probe all his secrets. She looked at her friends. Storm was
impassive. He'd accept her vengeance. Tani and Logan were less
accepting. If she did this it would always lie like a dirt smudge
across their friendship. Laris sighed. *Just stay there, Prauo.
Don't hurt him.* She brightened hopefully. *Unless he tries to
escape.* *You mean that?* *I have to. But if he tries
to hurt you or get away, then you can shred
him!* *That I shall do.* He
settled down with the air of a cat which has no intention of
moving anytime soon. Storm had watched. Yes.
Interesting. There was no doubt in his mind, even apart from the
second file he'd seen just before they left the patrol office,
that Laris had been Cregar's little sister's daughter. The ages
would fit, and there was quite a facial resemblance if one looked
for it. No one had before because the possibility had never
occurred to them. And only Storm had seen the last spacegram
which had arrived from his stepfather minutes before they left
for the circus. There hadn't been much in it, just the
information that further old records had been checked for Regan.
Those had noted that the man had reverted to his basic name and
dropped the final portion. Originally he'd been Jason Regan
Trehannan. So Laris came from a beast master line, and she
appeared as well to be bonded to the big cat—or something. Prauo's head turned toward
Storm. Purple eyes studied him. An itch awoke in his brain; then
words came. *Or something.* Storm opened his mouth in
shock and would have said he knew not what, but for the arrival
of Versha, Jared, and Anders. The woman was looking
annoyed. "We have everyone but that
damn Dedran. He's vanished into thin—" Tani and Logan moved aside.
Dedran was revealed with a smug Prauo still draped across him, a
pawful of wickedly extended claws at the ready. Versha's face
split into a wide, happy, and dangerous smile. "How nice. Fur
packaged for safety." She turned to Laris. "Can we have him now,
please?" *Prauo, time to get up. The
nice lady is going to make Dedran almost as miserable as you
could.* Prauo yawned and rose. He padded over to Laris as Anders
snapped arm-locks on the circus boss. Jared took charge of the
prisoner and marched him away. Versha surveyed them. "I think a conference in
Anders's office would be a good idea. I'd like to know what's
been happening." She glanced down. "Also if that man was Cregar,
and who killed him? I see you have your animals back though.
So—something of a happy ending." Her
smile went hungry. "For us too. Dedran will talk, my superiors
will be delighted, the guild will not be. A good result all
around, I'd say." Storm bent to lift Surra
again. "Yes." Logan had persuaded Laris to let go of Cregar's
hand and rise. He looked at the drooping girl. "We have loose
ends to tie and things to talk about. Information to share as
well. Laris?" Her head came up. "I don't want to jar Surra by
carrying her all the way, any ideas?" Given a need, Laris put
aside her grief for a little. "Lifter pallets. There's one around
in the next alley. Hold on." She darted away and returned with
the pallet towed smoothly behind her. Over an arm she had a
couple of blankets as bedding. Surra was laid on the
blanket-cushioned lifter top. Laris produced a set of bars which
slotted into the top. They formed a low surround to prevent Surra
from rolling off. Storm pushed the pallet and it glided forward.
The girl tucked the blanket edges over the cat and stepped
back. "Good. Thank you." Storm
approved. She flushed and nodded. The small cavalcade headed
for the gates. Once there, a hovercar engulfed Storm and Surra,
with Tani and her coyotes, who were still refusing to move more
than a pace from her. Logan hauled Laris into the next vehicle.
Prauo joined them, sitting comfortably between, to Logan's
amusement. Versha and Anders entered his official transport and
powered smoothly after the other two vehicles. Dedran brought up
in the rear in a fourth car with watchful guards. They reached
the Under-governor's offices and Anders halted them
all. "I think we should do best
by taking a break right now. Go bathe, eat, drink, and rest.
We'll meet tonight at eight-hour. By that time Versha and I may
have answers to some of the questions you'd like to ask." He
smiled at Dedran. "This does not apply to you, I fear. It is you
who shall be providing the answers." He nodded to Dedran's
guards. "Take him to the probe room and begin. I'll
follow." They scattered, to
reassemble seven hours later, clean, respectably garbed, and
hungry for information. Anders was waiting, his face alight with
results. "I'll make this fast. We
have preliminary information which clears some of the mysteries.
Briefly—Dedran's boss was a guild patron.
They planned to use stolen team beasts and Cregar to build new
teams. The guild patron intended to send these out as a sort of
guild survey to find new usable planets. The whole circus was
never more than a front. While they worked toward that plan they
also used it in other ways." He saw Laris draw back
slightly. "Yes, he's talked about you
and your friend there." He nodded to Prauo. "Before we began
deep-probe Dedran tried to persuade us that the espionage,
sabotage, and thefts were your idea. However I have seen the
Kowar record copies. Dedran's acts began long before you joined
the circus and you were twelve when you did so. Under probe he
confirmed you were illegally bonded and under duress and his
orders, not the reverse. I don't quite see you as the mesmerizing
criminal mastermind he's tried to claim anyway." Laris faced him, nerving
herself. "I'll swear oath and take probe to back it. I was afraid
for Prauo's life and my own." "I believe you. I accept
your oath but I'll have to have probe records for Trastor's
governor and patrol High Command. Don't worry. For those who
speak the truth, probe isn't dangerous—or even painful. We can do that
now." He picked up papers and shuffled them. "Apart from that we
had another informant in the guild's lower level. They confirm
there is now considerable infighting going on. Dedran's patron
has fallen. Other patrons would like to lay hands on Dedran. It's
been made plain his best hope of life is to stay right here and
talk about everything he's ever done or known." "And?" Logan
asked. Anders grinned. "And once he
understood that, the problem is going to be shutting him up any
time soon. We're encouraging that. We have cheated him in one
way. Somehow he'd taken the notion that if he cooperates he won't
go to rehab. I'm afraid he's wrong. With even half of what we
know he has done he already has a room booked. Or—if he chooses, a clean death.
Either way he won't be merely jailed or let go." Laris shivered. To have the
personality wiped. To be a baby again and to relearn, then go
free but never know who you'd been. That was death and maybe the
worse sort. She shivered again. She guessed Dedran would choose a
clean death in the end. At least if he did it would mean she'd
never see even his body again. Anders moved toward the
door. "Laris, come with me. We can
have this over in an hour. If you others would care to wait..."
They did so. He was back with Laris in the promised hour, both
smiling. Anders carried papers. He sat, handing the papers to
Versha as he did so. The patrol officer took center
stage. "I've conferred with Jared
and we agree. Laris, the probe confirms that all you did was done
as a bond-servant under orders and under threat of death or
injury to you or your beast. Therefore you are deemed guiltless.
This, so long as it cannot be subsequently proved against you
that you yourself were the deliberate cause, without legal
excuse, of death or injury to any other." The words rolled out in
solemn tones. Versha was giving the law as backed by the
patrol. "Storm witnessed the
transfer of all property owned by the man Jason Regan, known also
as Jas Cregar. It is accepted that this verbal transfer is a
legal will and that you inherit as was the dead man's intent. No
reason is seen why you should remain on Trastor. The probe clears
you. You are free to leave when and to where you wish. Monies
inherited may be transferred at your demand." She glanced at the
papers and spoke again slowly. "The beast known as Prauo is
deemed to be your property until such time as you may decide
otherwise. The patrol has no interest in laying claim to the
animal. Nor has the circus, now listed as a criminal entity in
and of itself, any rights in this matter. Your bond held by Aldo
M'ranne Dedran is hereby canceled since proof has been advanced
that such bonding was illegal. This judgment is the judgment of
the patrol in the name and person of Sind Illisho Versha. So
shall it be!" Her hand struck down on the table and she
relaxed. Laris sat there stunned.
Logan grabbed her, lifted the girl to her feet, and danced her
around the room. "Don't you get it? You're
free. Anything Cregar left is yours. No one can take Prauo from
you." He slowed, looking down at her. "You aren't still worried,
are you?" Laris shook her head. "No.
But Logan, I did terrible things. I helped Cregar steal Storm and
Tani's animals. You were hurt because of me. And that isn't all."
She fished under her tunic and began to draw up the ring. "Cregar
gave me this. I guessed where it came from but I loved it so
much. Take it, and if you don't want to know me, I understand."
She dropped the ring into his hand. Storm took it from his
brother. "The ring of
Walks-Soft-as-a-Puma. Brad will be happy to see that back
again." "I'm sorry," Laris choked.
"I'm sorry." Prauo moved to stand with her. In Storm's mind words
and images formed to combine a plea. *She has fought. Against the
camps, her bond-master, those who would have ill-used her.* Swift
flicking pictures of Laris cowering under blows, the sensation of
hunger, a blast of fear and pain. *Her life has been only strife
until now. She had no place of her own. None save me to love for
long and long.* Now a black cloud of lonely misery was sent, to
pierce Storm with Laris's remembered emotions. *Do you now cast
her out? What of your path? Has it been so free of wrongdoing. So
smoothly perfect?* *No.* *Then as the dark woman
judged, do you also judge, with honor and mercy.* Storm closed
his fingers about the ring and his other hand was laid on Laris's
arm. "When the war finished I
came to Arzor," he said softly. "I planned to kill a man I
believed had betrayed me and mine. I found a man with honor but
shut my eyes. Yet in the end I opened them to truth. Because of
that man's mercy I stand now with my own family. With a place.
Long ago a wise one of the people said that a gift should be
passed on, not back." He turned Laris a little, so that she faced
him. "You kept Surra from dying,
took care of Hing and her family well." He took in a deep breath.
"For my part I forgive anything done against me in your name. It
is dust on the wind. Forgotten." Laris stared. Tani smiled
down at her. "You cared for Minou and Ferarre. The clan accepts
blood-price. Buy something of the sky here and gift it to them."
She laughed softly. "I know where you could buy a meteor. A small
black sky-stone. The clan would forgive much for that gift to the
Thunder-talker. It is a thing of great power. They would forgive
the debt. None of them were wounded and they took four
bow-hands." "I'd pay happily." Laris
gulped. "Could I afford it?" "Oh, indeed. You have not
yet seen Versha's report on Cregar." She would save until later
the news that the man had been kin. Tani held up a list. "Your
friend was wealthy. In the hiding place of which you told us
there was a disk. It holds bank records. I have spoken to one who
knows. With all gathered together you inherit..." She spoke a sum
which left the girl gaping. "You can afford a sky-stone. And land
too, if you wished." With slow incredulous hope the girl moved to
gaze at Logan. He held her. "For my blood, you pay time.
Come back to Arzor. Stay with the family three months. Ride with
us. Know the land. If you choose then to stay or leave, any debt
to me is paid." Storm swept Tani hastily out of the room after
her final words. "I think they'd like to be
alone, dearling." Tani, catching one quick glimpse of Laris
locked in Logan's arms, agreed. It took time. Laris
submitted to a longer probe session for information. Anders's
friendly banker sorted out finances and transferred credits: A
final sum which would buy a meteor—and quite a lot of land should
Laris wish for the latter. Five tigerbats returned to
semi-freedom on Lereyne. The Thunder-talker's bracelets were
found hidden in Dedran's quarters on the circus ship. Tani would
return them along with a trophy lock of hair from the three:
Baris, Ideena, and Dedran, and the tale of how they died. The
clan would approve. But before they took ship
back to Arzor Laris stood alone on a hill and allowed ashes to
sift through her hands. She knew now by whose hand she had been
aided. Jason Regan Trehannan, who had taken his grandfather's
surname to honor that old soldier when his grandson enlisted.
Jason Trehannan who had become Jason Regan, then Jas Cregar, and
who in the end had redeemed his honor. To the silence of the
surrounding trees she spoke softly. "Be free of your sorrow and
pain, Cregar. May the spirits of your team find you now. Let them
walk with you so you are no more alone. May you find also my
mother, your sister who loved you, Uncle. And be doubly
comforted. All debts are paid." She descended the hill to Logan's
arms. The ship seemed to move like
a snail through space. They landed on Arzor at sunrise. Laris
looked up to see the lavender sky lighting up the land as the
warm air brought them the scent of falwood blossoms. The girl
could feel her tension drain away. The land took her to its
heart, making her its own. She hunted with Tani, laughed, teased,
and rode with Logan. Storm unbent sufficiently to show her the
frawn herd. Brad talked to her. Telling
her of Ishan, of the people from Cornwall, Ireland, and Brittany
who had gone there to bring back their language and some of the
old ways. Then the Xik had come and Ishan was a burned-out cinder
orbiting in death, but before that happened many settlers had
moved to DuIshan, the new world settled from the mother planet.
It was from DuIshan that Mandy, Tani's paraowl, came. One day
perhaps, Laris could visit DuIshan and see her origins for
herself. Quietly too Brad and Storm
attempted to find out something about Prauo. Was he a kidnapped
cub from another race, or a gene-spliced experiment? Whatever or
whoever he was none could deny his intelligence. It made no
difference to the big cat. Home was where Laris lived. She was
his sister; he would abide by the choices she made for them
both. Twelve weeks after her
return to Arzor she rode out with Logan to sit her horse on the
edge of the basin. In the far distance High Peaks showed purple
as Prauo's eyes. It called to her. The rocks, the high hills, the
dry scent of the desert fringe, the solitude, and the silence.
Logan watched as she gazed over the scene. He spoke
softly. "I won't hold you if you
feel you can't stay here. But if you wanted to stay and you liked
the idea, we could buy land together." He kept his voice neutral,
he'd not pressure her. "Do you want to leave?" She said nothing for many
minutes, allowing her heart and Prauo's to decide. At last she
turned to him. "Home is where you are. Why
would I leave our home?" she said. About the
Authors For more than fifty years,
Andre Norton, "one of the most
distinguished living SF and fantasy writers" (Booklist),
has been penning bestselling novels that have earned her a unique
place in the hearts and minds of millions of readers worldwide.
She has been honored with the World Fantasy Convention's Life
Achievement Award and with the Nebula Grand Master Award from her
peers in the Science Fiction Writers of America. Works set in her
fabled Witch World, as well as the Time Traders, the Solar Queen,
and Beast Master series, to name but a few in her great oeuvre,
have made her "one of the most popular authors of our time"
{Publishers Weekly). She lives in Murfreesboro, Tennessee,
where she presides over High Hallack, a writers' resource and
retreat. More can be learned about Ms. Norton's work and High
Hallack at www.andre-norton.org. Lyn
McConchie has
written many books, including collaborations with Andre Norton,
among them The Key of the Keplian, a Witch World novel,
and Beast Master's Ark. She lives in Norsewood, New
Zealand, where she writes and runs a farm. |
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