—lunatic, a small voice said. For a bedraggled, half-crazed human’s sake, to risk The Pride.
“Don’t push it,” she said to Khym while the lift was on the way down. She thumbed the safety off the pistol. “Gods forbid it’s called our bluff and brought us a grenade.”
“What do you do then?” Khym asked.
“Throw it back, for godssakes! How should I know?” The thought ruffled her nape-hairs. And punching the button on the in-lift com: “Haral—stand by that inside hatch release!”
The lift door whisked open. She walked out after Khym with her gun ready in her hand.
“Now, captain?” Haral asked.
“Now.”
A corridor and a half away the airlock’s inner hatch opened. Pyanfar grabbed Khym by the arm and jerked him over to the side of the corridor where there was vantage.
Like a black slither of freefall oil, the kif rounded the corner and stood there a good distance down the longest corridor The Pride had—stood there, all gangling gray-black nakedness, hands out to show that they were empty.
“All right,” she said, never taking the gun off the kif’s middle. “You keep those palms out, kif, and keep them in plain sight.”
“The air stinks.”
“It stinks out there too, kif. Just come a bit forward. Stop right there. Khym, go to the lock and get its clothes. Search them for weapons.”
“There is my knife and my pistol,” the kif said.
“Fine. Move it, Khym.”
Khym went—not without queasiness, that passing in the corridor. Khym flattened his ears as he went by the kif. The kif half turned its head, the hunched shoulders, the forward thrust of the long jaw become something strangely serpentine and graceful. The kif continued the motion in reverse, swinging back to her. The hands lifted, showing empty palms.
“You’re mine, huh?” Pyanfar said sourly. “What’s Sikkukkut got in mind in this exchange? I don’t trade my claim on the human. Hear?”
It made a slow move of its hands. “I hear.”
“So answer, you earless bastard. What are you doing here?”
“Waiting,” it said.
“For what?”
It gave a kifish shrug. “I don’t know.”
“You hand me puzzles, kif, I’ll skin you.”
Khym reappeared in the corridor behind the kif with his hands full of black cloth and leather. “Knife and gun,” he called out. “Nothing else.”
“Bring its robes. Give them to it.”
He brought them. Dropped them at the kif’s side.
“May I?” the kif asked.
She motioned with the gun. It bowed its head and moved very slowly, gathered its belongings and held them to its chest with that hunch of shoulders and lowering of head peculiar to kif. It looked sinister in one instant, beaten and pathetic in the next, in each shifting shadow on the gray-black, wrinkled skin.
The hairs rose on her back. “Khym. Open up that washroom. Skkukuk. Inside with you.”
The head lifted. “It is a waste,” Skkukuk said. “Give me my weapons and I shall give you your rivals.”
“Inside.”
“I serve a fool.”
“Not a great enough fool to turn my back on you, kif. Either Sikkukkut sent you or Sikkukkut threw you out; and in either case I don’t want you.”
Skkukuk’s head drew down between his shoulders. With that same serpentine grace he turned away and passed the open washroom door. But she thought that she had scored.
“Tully’s old quarters,” Pyanfar said to Khym, who lingered outside. “Toss it the rest of its garb.”
“We keeping this thing?”
“Heave it.”
Khym tossed boots and belt through the door. The pistol and knife he kept.
And shut the door and locked it. “It’ll probably wreck the room,” he said.
“That’s the least of our troubles.”
“What’s it want, for the gods’ own sakes?”
“You guess, you tell me.” She thumbed the safety back on her pistol, discovering her knees had gone to jelly. “Gods rot, I got a kif on my ship, and he wants to know what for. How should I know? I got ships incoming, I got a station in kif hands, and the kif are playing tag.” She turned and stalked back toward the lift, turned again. “Stand guard down here. Doublecheck that gods-rotted lock that it’s closed, put that stuff away, and for the gods’ own sake you open that washroom door—I don’t care if the kif blows up, you open that door I’ll space you first, then the kif! Hear me?”
His ears went down. His jaw dropped.
She walked back into the lift.
“And next time,” she yelled back down the corridor, “when I say give a thing you don’t drop it, hear?”
The door closed. He was still staring.
She leaned on the lift wall as the car slammed up. She was shaking, gods, and food occurred to her. Desperately.
But there was no time for that.
“Haral. What’s going on?”
“They’re entering critical approach.”
“Both of them?”
“Aye, captain. Both incoming.”
So it was not attack. Vigilance and Aja Jin were both committing themselves to dock and there was nothing left to defend their vulnerable backsides.
The car stopped; the doors opened. She stalked down the corridor toward the bridge.
“They’re on our beacon,” Haral’s voice continued from the com, tracking her on speakers down the corridor. “Kif are outputting guidance now. It jibes with ours. So far. Captain, we got another problem. Station-folk. We got our boards jammed with queries. We got panic out there.”
She muttered oaths and quickened her pace. Station riot. It was enough to coagulate any spacer’s blood. “We’ve got to hold this dock,” she said, arriving through corridor’s end onto the bridge; and not a harried head turned when her voice acquired a body. “Hilfy. Be polite. Tell the station-folk we got a sniper problem on this particular stretch of dock and keep off it.” She flung herself into her own chair and sent it whining about into position. Screens showed her what information The Pride could gather with station output reduced.
“Kif might agree to damp those station calls down,” Haral said.
“Better they get through. Less panic that way. Ten thousand citizens pouring down here after news is the last thing we need.”
“Uhnn.” Haral sent another list her way. “Messages you might want to see.”
She scanned it.
—Compliments of the hakkikt: system scan transmission is resumed for incoming ships. It will be accurate.
—The Personage urgently requests information—
—We make protests this insane and irresponsible action. Protest will be filed stsho authority—
—Compliments of the hakkikt, docking crews are ordered into position—
Thank the gods.
* * *
Jik of Aja Jin entered the bridge, Jik—alone: he wandered in like some bewildered spacer hunting a proper bar, his black face doleful and worried as ever. He wore a gold collar and half a dozen bracelets; a broad gold and bronze belt above a kilt of purple and bronze stripes; carried an AP gun in its black holster over all of this, weapon enough to take out half the bridge; two knives—Jik rarely underequipped himself, and the condition of the docks out there did not encourage optimism. “About time, Jik,” Pyanfar said to him.
“See? Tell you that new engine hold, a? You number one sharp, Pyanfar, handle this ship good. Ker Hilfy, good see you ‘live.”
“Na Jik.” Formal and self-contained. “Good to see you.”
Not when do we go in, how soon? Give me a gun. Hilfy kept to drill, part of crew. But if she had smiled since her rescue, it was perfunctory, tightly measured.
Through the several waiting hours.
Everyone waited. They waited still, disposed about the bridge, even Chur, who sat propped up in bandages—“You damn tough,” Jik vouchsafed, nodding Chur’s way. Chur flicked
her ears. “I pass na Khym, a, say he got stand guard down in lower corridor. Ehrran clan all same got you airlock secure.” Jik leaned this rattling magnificence against the nearest counter edge, bit at a hangnail of one non-retracting claw. He looked weary as the rest of them. His eyes had wrinkles about their edges, There were deep creases by the corners of his mouth. “Also got hani guard take position on dockside. That Ehrran, she got ‘nough security both us, a? Same got quick trigger. Make me worry.”
“Gods rot it, Jik—you had a look at this dock?”
He shrugged. His brow rumpled as he glanced up. “Got trouble, sure. Got lot calls, station folk lot panic. Kif.” Back down the hall the lift worked. “You do number one fine job get in here, hani. Number one fine job get ker Hilfy out.”
“We’re not through yet. And we’ve got to get out of here again.” She canted her ears toward the recent noise of the lift, turned a glance in that direction. Khym was striding down the corridor with a dark look on his face. She matched the scowl as he walked onto the bridge: he had left his post unasked. But the lift had gone down again, on call. She heard that too.
“Begging pardon,” Khym said tautly. “Ehrran’s headed topside. I locked up.”
She took that in the coded way he meant it: he had left the washroom unremarkable to outsiders. Politics and intrigue: he was no fool in that department. Jik did not ask further, in his own indolently gracious way, and bit another hangnail. The lift worked again. Tirun and Geran got to their feet; Hilfy was already standing. Haral stayed by her board. “She fine captain,” Jik murmured, of their arriving guests. “Come in right on mark; good ship, Vigilance. Also damn fool. I like maybe leave one ship undock, little way out—scare these kif. But this hani scare me, a? Same like have chi for ally: crazy. So I got make her come in dock too. Keep eye on her. She hate you, Pyanfar. Maybe want you have accident.”
Pyanfar’s ears went down. Ears all round the bridge flattened, excepting the minuscule ears of the gold-glittering mahe. “She’s a bastard,” Pyanfar said, “but that far, no. She’d like the kif to settle it.”
And down the hall the lift let out a red-gold, black-breeched crowd of armed hani.
“Sure brought crew enough,” Tirun muttered. “How many’s she got on that ship, anyhow?”
“I checked library back at Kshshti,” Haral muttered. “Vigilance runs a good hundred fifty crew. All those offices, you know.”
“Funny,” Geran said, “when we were short-handed they never had crew to spare.”
“Funny,” Pyanfar said. “I’d have enjoyed turning them down.”
The Eyes of the han walked onto the bridge, immaculate, her silken mane and beard in bronze ringlets; her black silk breeches, Immune clan uniform, were crisp and new; the AP gun hung at her hip in well-polished black leather. Elegance. Wealth—trying to do what? Pyanfar wonderd. Attract bandits and kif? Her ears refused to prick up. Her pulse refused to stay at level. Gods rot the Immune and all her ilk. Government officials. Note-takers.
“Best if we could have avoided this,” Rhif Ehrran said: You botched it, that meant. “Our transmissions from Central are all kif. Do we propose to negotiate under these conditions?”
And Rhif Ehrran looked at Jik, deliberately and exclusively at Jik, past Pyanfar.
“We’ll manage,” Pyanfar said in Jik’s silence, and Rhif Ehrran turned her head with just enough slowness.
“I hope so.”
There was no profit in argument. The Immune was only collecting complaints on Chanur clan dealings. Even yet. The list was already long.
“We go,” Jik said. “Maybe time we talk be already long time the way this human reckon, a? Want him back. Val-u-able, a?”
“We just walk in there.”
“Won’t be a problem,” Pyanfar said. Deliberately she settled on the arm of Tirun’s vacant chair, informal as Jik, leaving the Immune and her crew standing. “We just walked in, walked out. Kif’s real friendly.”
The han deputy turned, her be-ringed ears flattening. “You want to walk in and do it again, Chanur? Maybe you can finish the job this time.”
“Fine. It’ll be just fine. You’re delegating to Chanur, are you?”
Jik stood up, abruptly, with a rattle of his weaponry. “No joke,” he said, moving into the midst. “Got number one serious problem. Not got time hani quarrel. Got one human got bad trouble. Got damn bad mess, kif got station, got plenty scared people, got long time not hear from mahen authority this station. You got way get in there, a, friend Pyanfar?”
“Sure. Ask. That kif’ll let us in number one quick. It’s getting out again I can’t vouch for.”
“How many kif?”
“Last time, maybe a hundred, maybe more. That I saw in that room. Up and down that dock, you’re talking—oh, maybe four, five thousand. Maybe worse. You got current stats on Mkks?”
“It’s crazy to go in there,” Rhif Ehrran said.
“Got idea?” Jik asked.
“I had the idea,” Rhif Ehrran said, “that coming into dock with all three ships was crazy in the first place, but you had other opinions.”
“What you want? Shoot up dock? Got cit-i-zen here.”
“Captain.” Haral spun her chair about. “I got a blip.”
Pyanfar’s eye was already moving, already taking in the scan-image that flashed to main-screen above all the seats.
Every eye was. Crew dived for posts without an order. Pyanfar did, abandoning Jik and Rhif Ehrran and her lot to their own devices.
“Get ID, gods rot it, what’s the output?” She spun her chair about and felt the press of a large weight on the shoulder of her chair. Jik, getting view of the screens: she made no objection, too busy to take account of distractions.
“That’s stsho output!” Hilfy exclaimed.
“We gods-blasted hope it is,” Tirun said. “Kif could’ve—”
“Send to station,” Pyanfar said. “Query.”
A light on com-output lit: confirmation of the outgoing message. “This is The Pride of Chanur,” Khym’s deep voice rumbled, while other lights signaled activity from other crew. “What’s that ship doing out there?”
Not proper com-etiquette, gods knew, but direct.
“Khym, give me the response,” Pyanfar said, and as Rhif Ehrran moved up close and offered some advice: “Get clear. We’re working, rot it.”
“—of the hakkikt, Pride of Chanur, this information is private.”
“Give me output!” Pyanfar said; and it arrived. “Kif compliments of Pyanfar Chanur, you by the gods lay a hand on that stsho we’ll yank loose and take your wall out! What’s going on over there?”
Prolonged silence.
“Give me that contact,” Rhif Ehrran said, and leaned on her chair back.
“Not on my bridge.”
“Stsho’s pulling out,” Haral said. “That’s outbound, vectored nadir. . . .”
Better news.
“—the hakkikt, Pride of Chanur, the stsho undocked without clearance or docking assist. This is not an attack. This was not authorized. It was unprovoked.”
“Got station damage, Central?”
Silence a moment. “We are authorized to report so.”
“Got a problem, don’t you, kif?”
Silence.
“Don’t provoke it,” Rhif Ehrran said. “Chanur, give me that.”
“Hhhhuh.” From Jik. “Let be. Get ship code. No contact.”
“That’s Nsthenishi,” Hilfy reported. “Comp says Rlen Nle’s its home port.”
“When rain falls up,” Ehrran said. “Stsho never give ports further in than that. Eggs’ll get you pearls it’s Llyene. That ship is straight from the capital.”
“Stsho personnel was on the dock,” Pyanfar said, “when we came in. I don’t know where it came from.”
“Message from the hakkikt,” the voice from Central said. “The situation on this station is already conducive to incidents. Your allies have been permitted contact with you. Are you prepared now to meet and
negotiate face to face, or do we expect more delays?”
“No more delays. We’ll come with our weapons, kif.”
Silence. “The hakkikt says: All sides will be armed, hunter Pyanfar.”
“We’ll be there,” Pyanfar said. “About a quarter hour.” Rhif Ehrran leaned forward. Pyanfar brushed her aside with a forearm and stayed over the directional mike.
“Rot you—” Ehrran said.
“This is acceptable.” From the kif.
Pyanfar cut it off. “That stsho still headed?” she asked rightward.
“Still,” Haral said.
“Monitor that output.” She swung the chair about, looked up at Jik. “So we try for Tully this time. We ready?”
“You have no authority to negotiate,” Rhif Ehrran said. “Leave this to us from here on. You got as much as you can get easily. You’d serve us better staying here.”
“Easily, huh?” At the boards the tracking and translating went on. Pyanfar stood up and stared at the backs of her crew. “Shut down to Hilfy and Chur’s posts. Shunt command to Chur, Haral. We’re going on a walk down the docks, we are.” And when Hilfy turned her chair about, mouth open. “Hilfy, niece—you’re a provocation to them, and I think you know it. You’re staying here.”
“Aunt—” Hilfy got to her feet.
“Sfik, niece. You’re a prize in this, like it or not, and bringing you back into the hakkikt’s reach is asking for more kifish tricks. Sit tight. And let Chur do the talking to Central. Let’s try to get Tully out of there, huh? Efficiently and quietly. For his sake.”
Hilfy’s jaw clamped. Her ears were back, her claws dug into the seatback. But: “Aye,” she said. Everyone but Chur was getting to her feet. Khym too. And the Ehrran crowd stood there aftward on the bridge, blackbreeches among whom ker Rhif took her stance, still scowling, while Jik leaned his rump against a cabinet and rubbed behind one ear.
“Is she running this?” Rhif Ehrran asked indignantly. “Captain Nomesteturjai, I undertook this business on your government’s request, understanding you personally requested—”
“My government same request you go with,” Jik said. “Same request you got patience, honorable. Chanur got thing organized, a?”
“Come on,” Pyanfar said. “Guns, Tirun. Let’s get this moving.”