"They're firing!" Chur yelled and that reality got through to Hilfy's brain, sent her hand clawing for the gun in her pocket, numb-fingered from a shock to her elbow somewhere in the spin. The car had stopped. The 171
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forward window was cracked. The driver was slumped; both guards were alive.... "Stay inside," Chur was yelling from the other side as one guard worked at the door on that side. A shock hit the car and blossomed in a fireball beyond the cracked front window and Hilfy got the gun out as the stench of ozone roiled through the door in silver smoke. The door opened on manual, slammed down as the smoke poured in and the mahe sprawled as he went out in a pop of weaponsfire through the smoke: his comrade fired from inside and another shock hit the car, fire bloomed, deafening.
"Hilfy!" Tully dragged at her as cold air hit from the other direction, as Chur got the door open on the sheltered side and bailed out of the car.
Hilfy flung a look in the other direction, pasted shot after shot at the flutter of black kif robes amid the smoke, intending to go when she had stopped that.
But alien hands seized the waist of her trousers and skidded her sharply backward across the slick seat even as she fired. An arm whipped round her waist and jerked her from the door backwards as she got off a last few shots. Tully tried to carry her, but she twisted free, got her feet on the ground and ran for herself, Tully beside her, Chur—
Another shock blossomed by her, and she was flying through the air, the deck coming up under her hands and under her face as something heavy came down on her and sprawled.
She was running then after a blank space, her legs working, not knowing how she had gotten there or where she was going until the gray of a girder came up and hit her shoulder and she spun, flailed for balance and caromed into Tully, arms about him as she decided on cover and kept falling, crawling then, along the base of the gantry over deckbolts. She gripped the hard edge of the base rim, hitched herself along, lay still then.
Smoke roiled along the overhead where red alarm strobes flashed, staining girders and smoke alike. Sounds were distant, through the ringing in her ears. She felt small distant pains, saw Tully's face twisted with exertion and with pain. "Chur?" he said, twisting on his elbow to look back. In panic: "Chur?" And Hilfy rolled over to look through the obscuring smoke, wiping her eyes and trying to see and hear.
"Chur?" she cried.
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The red-gray smoke gave up a momentary view of tangled vehicles and other wreckage, of running figures, of fire from various quarters. She heard the dim chitter of kif commands, flinched as a shot came their way and reached to her pocket for the gun, but it was gone.
"Hilfy—" Tully cried, and pulled her further back as kif poured past them to take up position.
"O gods," she breathed. "We're behind the wrong gods-rotted line!"
Shots popped off the wall behind them and ricocheted wildly. She ducked down and in the first pause in fire she grabbed Tully by the shirt, scrambled up and ran with him while the smoke held— but that smoke was not dissipating as it should, the fans were not working, and it dawned on her battered skull that they were cut off, shut down: section doors had sealed.
* * *
" Where? " Pyanfar shouted into the com as if volume could help, aware of Tirun and Khym and Geran at her back and a great silence elsewhere on the bridge. " What 'stay still'? You gods-rotted incompetent— where around the rim?" — Babble poured into her ear. She whirled round as her eye caught movement, saw Haral's running arrival on the bridge and waved a furious hand at her crew. " Arm! Move it!" "Got section seal go," the mahen official was saying into her ear. "Got no chance kif get away, you wait report—"
"You authorize us past that seal. Hear?"
"Office got no authority—"
"Get it!" She cut the official off in midword and shoved her way past Khym. Geran had the sidearms out of the locker. "Get the rifles," she said.
They had them. It was illegal, a defense they never admitted to port authorities they had.
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"Aye," Haral said, and ran.
"Pyanfar—" Khym said.
She put the lock on controls, spun about and ran. Khym was with them and she had no desire to stop him. Not in this.
* * *
The huge section doors were shut, red and amber strobes on their surface spearing through the wafts of smoke that reached even here. Sirens wailed and echoed in the vastness of the docks. "They're shut, they're sealed," Hilfy gasped, blinking smoke-tears and half-carrying the human who half-carried her, the two of them weaving past the clutter of dockside bins and chutes as they tried to get the break they needed to get past the line of fire.
"We can't get out— Tully, stop!"
Shots broke out from a new direction. She dragged him off his balance.
They both staggered, thumped into the echoing side of a bin and she landed hard on her rump as Tully collapsed with a gasp. Flesh stank. He rolled over, clutching at his arm and she kept pulling at him, claws hooked into his shirt as she worked toward the corner—
O gods, that there be shelter there—
There was an alleyway of a kind, a recess for freight loading, a door with a white light over its recess. SERVICE ACCESS, said a battered sign, ROHOSU COMPANY. Beside it, mahen graffiti, obscurely obscene. She tried the door; but it was locked like every other door along the row once the emergency had sounded. She rang the bell; battered at the unyielding steel. "Open up, gods rot you! We're hani! Let us in!"
No answer. Tully babbled something. Sirens. She heard them too, far down the dock. She sank down by him, pried his hand from his arm and grimaced at the wound the dim light showed, black edged and bleeding hard. She grabbed the tail of his shirt and tore a wide strip of cloth off, pressed it tight and put his hand on it, ripped another strip off to tie it with.
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"Easy," she breathed, senseless chatter to keep him from panic. "Easy, you're all right, all right, hear?"
He slumped back against the wall, his face gone to waxen color. The hand of the wounded arm shook and the tremor spread to the rest of him as he began to go into shock. But he listened, his eyes on her whenever she looked.
"Listen," she said, "listen, station's onto it now. And The Pride— they'll have heard by now. The captain's doing something, you can bet she'll get us help— Pyanfar, understand?"
"Pyanfar come."
"Bet on it. All right, huh?" She got the bandage around his arm, put his hand on it to hold that. She snugged the knot tight and he mumbled something in human language. No translator. The translator-tape—
— in the bundle of clothes. With the papers. Back at the wreck. With Chur—
"Hilfy—" He stiffened, eyes fixed toward the exit of the alley. She turned her head.
Shadows moved in that red-dyed smoke, paused and conversed outside, a gathering of black robes, tall, stoop-shouldered silhouettes.
Tully edged aside, out of the light the door cast. She moved too, as carefully as she could, as far as Tully did, and put her arms about him to hide his pallor with her own redbrown hide as much as she could within the shadows. She felt Tully shivering; felt her own stomach knotted up when she recalled kif eyesight.
They were night-hunters by preference; and Tully— white shirt, pale hair, paler skin—
She kept her arms clenched about him.
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And saw that conversation outside their refuge break up, the kif start to move.
One stopped and looked their way.
* * *
"Open that gods-rotted door!" Pyanfar yelled, and used the rifle butt on the guardroom plex, so a scared mahendo'sat in the section-control yelled back threats from the other side. "It's clear from the Personage!" she yelled. "Open that section-seal!" "Au-to-matic," the yell came back through the com-transfer, in mangled pidgin. Mahen station.
Half the personnel never managed fluency in pidgin.
"Personage!" she yelled back in mahen Standard.
Gibberish came back. This one spoke dialect.
Black-robed shadows filled the alleyway, dark, featureless, except for the wan light of the bulb in the low ceiling of the door recess and Hilfy gathered herself to her feet. Tully struggled and she helped him by his good arm to give him that chance at least.
"Run if you can," she said in a low voice, thinking perhaps she could break a hole for him. But he knew so few words. He pressed closer to her as the kif gave them less room. He would try to fight— blunt-fingered, without any advantage, without even speed to outrun a kif. And it was Tully they wanted: alive. She had no doubt of that. "Got claws," she said beneath her breath. "You don't. Run, understand?"
The kif moved closer, keeping their circle. "We'll not hurt you," one said.
"You're in the wrong place, young hani. Certainly you are. If you had a gun you would have used it, would you not? But we aren't your enemies."
"Who?" She perceived the origin of the voice: the speaker stood out among the rest, taller, finer-robed, and she guessed the name as she edged 176
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into Tully, trying to keep open space about them as the kif moved and shifted.
"Sikkukkut. From Meetpoint. You remember me, young Chanur. I have no wish to hurt you, either one. And there are far too many of us. Come, be reasonable."
The kif moved, all of them at once. "Run!" she yelled at Tully, spun and swung and kept swinging as her claws carried a kif headon into the wall.
" Run, for godssakes, run—"
Black cloth obscured her vision, cleared as Tully pulled one off her, and she rattled that one's brains.
But kif claws pulled Tully by the shoulder, and grabbed him by the arm.
"Gods blast!" she cried and tried to get that one off him, but two kif got her arms and a kifish arm came hard about her throat.
* * *
The door thundered back on chaos, the flash of red lights on smoke the fans refused, the sweep of floods, the lunatic strobe-flash. "Gods," Geran muttered. The center of the trouble was evident, a knot of flashing white lights stabbing into the smoke far up the dockside. Pyanfar started running first, rifle in both hands— "No, wait—" from the mahen official who had gotten the door open. "Hani, got wait!—" But Geran was pace for pace with her and gaining— fleet-footed Geran, whose sister Chur was in that mess. A laser shot streaked the smoke. Pyanfar brought the rifle up and fired on the run. Geran did the same, not with particular skill, but with dispatch; and more fire came behind her, with the mahen official screaming for them to take cover.
Khym shouted, something: the heights distorted it, twisted it into a blood-crazed roar. A volley of smoke-bounced shots came back from kif near the 177
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wreckage and Pyanfar dived aside, remembered Khym behind her with one heart-stopping fright and rolled to cover his blind rush.
But he came skidding in beside her, gasping, with the pistol quickly braced up hunting targets as Tirun reached their cover. Geran and Haral had tucked in with the mahendo'sat next a stack of cans: shots spattered the plastic and those three ducked.
Then a flurry opened up from the other side, and for a moment the pop of projectile fire rang everywhere off the overhead: mahen voices yowled distant satisfaction and she put her head out, sprawled back again because shots were wild and going a dozen ways about the wreckage and up the dock to their position.
Geran got off three quick shots from her side, Haral another burst. "That's mahen fire!" Haral yelled, seeing something from her vantage; and Pyanfar ventured another look, saw fire going the other way and pelted out of cover the last long sprint for the wreckage, from which cover a steady spatter of fire went out aimed the other way.
Mahe braced in among the tangle started at their arrival, and hani among them turned about with backlaid ears.
Ehrran.
Pyanfar slid in among them, grabbed an Ehrran shoulder and shook it as Geran arrived, and the rest of the crew. "Where's Chanur?" Pyanfar shouted into the Ehrran crewwoman's backlaid ears. "Where, gods rot you!"
The Ehrran pointed mutely to a hani lying on the deck and Pyanfar's heart lurched over as Geran scrambled that way, to her sister's side.
"Where's the rest?" Pyanfar yelled, and a larger hani arm appeared from behind her and seized a fistful of Ehrran beard. "Where are they?" Khym shouted, and the Ehrran waved a frantic hand toward the dock at large.
"— Ran— they ran— somewhere out there—"
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Pyanfar let go her grip with a shove and abandoned the Ehrran to get to Chur.
Chur was alive. They had propped her head off the deck and the wound that had spread blood all about was hard-sealed and glistening with plasm that stopped further bleeding. Geran bent over her, just holding her hand, looking more than scared.
"How is she?" Pyanfar asked.
"She hurts," Chur said for herself, past scarcely moving jaws. Her eyes were slitted. "Where's Hilfy— Tully?"
"We don't know. Where'd you lose them?"
A weak move of Chur's head. A try at pointing. "Got out," she said. The pointing was nowhere in particular. "Don't know."
Pyanfar looked round at the others who hovered near. "That packet. Tully had it in his hands. Hunt the wreck."
"Got," Chur said thickly, reached feebly behind her head, delirious, Pyanfar thought, until she recognized the thing Chur's head was lying on.
Chur tried to pull it. Tully's plastic sack.
"Gods," Pyanfar said with feeling. "Geran. Stay with her. You hang onto that. They'll get an ambulance in here real soon."
"Not Kshshti," Chur said. "Pride."
For a moment Pyanfar failed to understand her, then gripped her arm. "No way we leave you here. Got that?"
"Got," Chur said, and let her eyes close.
"Stay with her," Pyanfar said to Geran. "We'll find them." She stood up, keeping low, for there were still shots flying, drew Tirun and Khym and 179
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Haral off to the mahen position. She seized one by the arm and pulled him about. "Hani. Seen hani?"
"No got," he said.
"Alien?"
"No got."
She edged back again, cast about amid the confusion of arriving emergency vehicles, the thunder of PA above sirens, each confounding the other. Evacuate, she made out. Evacuate, evacuate— unsafe—
— getting the non-involved clear. She hoped. Possibly the whole sector of the station had gone unstable in the explosions. In the mahen-language shouting and the noise of the sirens there was no knowing. She put her head up, for firing had stopped, ducked down again as her own crew pulled her down, but there were still no shots.
"Think they're through out there," she said, and seized Haral by the arm.
"Get Chur into an ambulance. Geran's not to leave her. Whatever."
"Right," Haral said; she turned to leave and froze, so that Pyanfar turned to look too, where hani had appeared among the emergency vehicles, some black-trousered, several blue, the first sight of which lifted her hope and the second dashed it.
"Ayhar," she spat, and hurled herself to her feet. "Ehrran!" — for Rhif Ehrran was in that group, and she headed for them in mingled wrath and hope, dodged round a stretcher crew and a fire-control team headed into the wreckage. Hani faces turned her way, Banny Ayhar and Rhif Ehrran chiefest of them.
"Chanur!" Ehrran shouted, headed her way. "By the gods, Chanur, you've really fouled it up, haven't you?"
She slowed to a walk, with long, long strides. A hand caught her arm and she jerked free.
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"Captain," Tirun begged her. "Don't."
She stopped. Stood there. And Ehrran had the sense to stop out of her reach. Tirun was on one side of her, Khym on the other.
"Where are they?" she asked Ehrra
n.
"Gods if I know," Ehrran said, hand on that pistol at her side. The whites showed at the edges of her eyes, "Gods rot it, Chanur—"
"Be some use. We need searchers. They may have taken cover somewhere, anywhere along the docks."
Ehrran flicked her ears nervously, turned and lifted a hand in signal to her own. "Fan out. Watch yourselves."
"Move," Pyanfar said to her own, and they did.
* * *
Hilfy moved a finger, a hand, discovered consciousness and remembered kif, with the kif-stink all about her. She tried the whole arm, both arms, a deep panicked breath, and opened her eyes on a gray ceiling and bare steel and lights, with the memory of a jolt she had not fully heard, with her arms tangled in something, her legs pinned— the wreck— o gods— She turned her head, a dizzy haze of lights, a bright spot of light with kif clustered round something pale on a table, something pale and human-sized.
She heaved, met restraints that held her to a surface. Blankets wrapped her arms about, and they had her fastened about that. She heard another clank of machinery, shieldings in retraction, all the familiar sounds, watched the kif cast an anxious look up and go back to their work— Clank! Thump!
Ship sounds. It was the grapple-disengage. The kif stayed at work, clinging to the table on which Tully lay when the g stress shifted. There 181