Chanur's Legacy cs-5
Page 21
Fact was, Hilfy thought suddenly, and for no particular reason but many bits and tags, Chihin was pushing in a very odd way, for Chihin. Gods-be patient, she was.
And she knew the looks young Fala threw in na Hallan's direction.
It could get down to a sticky situation trying to get na Hallan's highly attractive self off the ship. Which by the gods she was twice determined to do. They had a smoothly functioning crew. They got along. The ship didn't need the scandal, Chanur didn't need the gossip, Meras didn't need it, and if she had her hands on ker Holy Righteousness Sahern at this moment she'd give her a lasting remembrance of Hilfy Chanur.
The crew was nattering at each other again. Quibbling over the jump, which was all right — exactitude saved fuel and saved money.
But they were coming up on the mark.
"Stow it. We're away, on the count. Are our passengers set, Fala?"
"Gtstexcellency says they are."
"On the mark. How's our shadow?"
"Just blazing right along. I wish that son'd give us more room. We don't need to bump him in the drop."
"That son or his pilot is probably just too gods-be good. He could jump that ship onto a dinner-plate, you want to lay odds? They don't give just any captain a hunter-ship. And that's by the gods what it is."
"I'd lay odds our stsho passenger might know more about that son than gtst is saying."
"I'd lay odds our other stsho passenger did know more than gtst is sane enough to say. But we've no guarantee gtstisi is going to sort out anything like the stsho that was."
"Spooky," Tarras said. "Spooky lot. / wouldn't want to go through jump with a crazy person."
"I wouldn't want to be a crazy person in jump," Tiar said. "Can you imagine?"
"I'd rather not," Hilfy said. "Are we watching where we're going, please? We're coming up…"
The coordinates blinked.
She punched the button. The Legacy…
… dropped out of Kita Point space…
… "Well, well," Pyanfar said.
"Go away," Hilfy said. She didn't want her aunt. It frightened her that it was her aunt who kept disturbing her dreams — and it was beyond any doubt a dream, it was that comfortable thing the mind did when it didn't want to handle space that wasn't space. Except her gods-rotted aunt wouldn't stay out of them lately. Maybe it was the political stench about the Legacy on this voyage. Maybe it was her good sense trying to tell her she'd made a mistake. She wasn't superstitious about the illusions.
Not much, anyway.
"You're indulging yourself," Pyanfar said, sitting on something or another — furniture and rocks materialized when you wanted to sit. And Pyanfar usually sat down when she was going to meddle, parked herself like a gravity sink and insisted on affecting things around her. "Woolgathering's a bad habit, slows your reflexes, fogs your thinking…"
She tried to imagine Pyanfar into the encompassing gray haze.
Pyanfar said, obstinately present: "You live in jump, don't you? Just your own little place where you can have your way with Tully and nobody can object. Not even Tully."
Her subconscious was getting vicious.
"Try living in realspace," Pyanfar said. "Try living where you are, Hilfy-girl. Try your own species, for starters."
"Gods rot your interference!" She was as mad as she'd been in years. "If you'd stayed out of my business I wouldn't have married that gods-cursed fool—"
"You're not listening. This isn't a life, niece. Life's not this. Your cousin Chur doesn't time out. Your cousin Chur sees the stars in a way I almost can. And you spend your time wishing for what wasn't.
Wasn't, niece, wasn't ever, and wouldn't be, and couldn't be in a thousand years, and if you want me to say more, I will."
She didn't. That rarely stopped Pyanfar Chanur. But her aunt tilted her chin up in that lock-jawed way she had when she knew she'd won a point, and changed subjects.
"That's a hunter ship out there. And it wants what you've got. It could blame things on the kif. It could be rid of you, get hold of your passengers and the oji, pin the raid on kif pirates, and still show up in civilized ports smelling like a spring morning. Think about that. They could be lying silent when you show up at Kshshti. They could clip a vane and strand you, for a least thing they could do. Kshshti's not going to investigate. You know what Kshshti is…"
She was on Kshshti docks — red lights flashing, black-robed shadows closing in on them in some trading company's dingy freight access, fighting for their lives, and Tully going down-She didn't want the rest of that memory. She tried to come out of it. She hadn't flinched at going to Kshshti when she'd known she had to, she hadn't let what had been affect what would be… she wasn't a coward, she hadn't been and wouldn't run scared. She'd go there, she hadn't given herself time to think and none to recall the jump out of there, the absolute black despair of a kifish hold…
Kshshti was where it had started. That was where she had made the worst mistake of her life, when the kif had been waiting for nothing so much as a chance at any of them. Leave it to the kid.
She'd been younger then. Hormones in full spate. A fool.
A kif leaned close to the cage, and talked to her, its speech full of clicks from inner and outer rows of teeth. A kif reached into a cage and devoured small live creatures that squealed and squeaked pathetically. Kif were delicate eaters. Their appetites failed, with other than living food. And nothing went down their gullets but liquids — of whatever viscosity. She wanted out of this dream… But it was forever before she heard the beep of the alarm, telling her they were making the drop….. here and now.
* * *
"That's first dump," she said. And remembered the hunter-ship. "Where's Ha'domaren? Look alive!
Can you spot him?’’
"Got the buoy," Fala murmured.
And from Chihin and a deeper voice almost simultaneously, a set of coordinates, as Tiar's switching sent the buoy system-image to her number one screen.
She was relieved to know where that son was, damned sure.
Meanwhile Fala was talking to gtst excellency, who seemed to be alive, and Tiar was handling a message to station.
"Rocks didn't blow," Tarras said.
"That's nice. Advise gtst excellency we're going down again."
Pulling the dumps close together. But they'd come in close. Showy precision. She pulled a nutrient pack from the clip and downed it in three gulps.
"Kshshti Station," Tiar was saying, talking to a station central that wasn't going to hear them for another hour. "This is, inbound."
Not The Pride. Now wasn't then. Maybe on Kshshti docks a stsho was running for cover. Maybe they'd caught Atli-lyen-tlas this time, maybe gtst hadn't had time to get out of port. A stsho didn't have the constitution for consecutive spaceflights. Gtst had to be feeling the strain of the chase by now. Gtst had to be saying to gtstself that maybe running wasn't worth it.
Gods-for-sure certain no kifish captain had provided gtst the comforts they'd given Tlisi-tlas-tin. That kifish ship held the dark kifish eyes preferred, the sullen glow of sodium lights, the perpetual stink of ammonia …
… on anyone who dealt with them…
A stsho couldn't flourish in the dark. Gtst sanity would go.
On the other hand… considering Kita Point… maybe it already had. Maybe there wasn't an Atli-lyen-tlas by now, just a body, and compliance to kifish orders, and no knowledge who gtst had been.
Disquieting thought.
One she refused to deal with until she had found their recipient.
They traveled at insystem v now, good, peaceful citizens of the Compact. They had the output of the buoy computer that, constantly updated by real events in its vicinity and events transmitted from Kshshti Station, maintained a time-warped reality of its own, shading from the truly real and contemporaneous, or at least minutes-ago truth to the many-minutes-ago truth of Kshshti station.
The station schema was, at the time they got it, some 52 minutes old. That was a
benefit of the peace: stations were no longer so paranoid as to think that two enemies might go at each other in full view of a station — or with one linked to its fragile skin. Kshshti Station showed Ha'domaren ahead of them… where else? And a ship named Nogkokktik, captained by one Takekkt, at dock since yesterday.
Closing the gap, by the featherless gods.
Hani traders didn't even go to Kshshti. But there were sixty-seven messages for aunt Pyanfar here, one outstanding legal paper suing for information, and a stray package pickup (from a mahen religious foundation?) postage due.
Meanwhile the kifish ship Nogkokktik remained at dock — wasn't talking to anyone except station, and claimed, through station communications, not to know anything about any stsho passenger.
Likewise Ha'domaren received their salutations, welcomed them to Kshshti, and, no, Ana-kehnandian was not available. Ana-kehnandian was in his sleep cycle and could not be disturbed. Amazing how the watch officer's command of the pidgin declined as soon as he'd said that.
And was there a stsho ambassador or anything of the sort on Kshshti?
No. The ambassador had taken ill and died last month.
"Gods rot it!" Hilfy cried.
"There's something," Tarras said, "going on.'‘
Notable understatement. She gave Tarras the stare that deserved.
"I mean," Tarras amended that, "major."
A long breath, slowly exhaled; unwelcome reminiscence of ship stalking ship, the chill of hearing a safety go off behind one's back. Of seeing a ship die in a silent fireball, and hearing the voices over com…
She didn't want those days back again. She didn't want to be in this port playing tag with a kif.
But gods be. She hadn't the habit of giving in. Not even to her aunt. And never in a mahen hell to outsiders, notably not the kif.
She sat with her chin on her hand, thinking through their options, since no one was talking. Kshshti authorities were no reliable source of help — unless someone had come in here and swept out every official who had ever taken a bribe, and she had never heard that that had happened.
Of resources they had…
"Deal with customs," she said. "Offer the cans for sale… except the rocks. We're keeping the rocks."
"Keeping the rocks," Tarras echoed. "Right."
"If we get a decent offer, let me know. If we don't get a decent offer, look us up an honest warehouse…"
"At Kshshti?"
"Best we can do. I want everybody on Kshshti to know what we're carrying; and that we're willing to warehouse it if we don't get our offer."
Tarras gave her a curious, thoughtful look.
"Why would a Chanur ship come in carrying strategics and staples, and insist on warehousing… if we don't get a top price?"
A line developed between Tarras' brows. "You'll panic the market," Tarras protested. "Captain… begging your pardon…"
"They know they're dealing with Chanur. The dockside bartenders probably know we're carrying an important stsho object. We're in this to make a living, cousin. So are they."
"You'll shove the market into a war scare. It'll proliferate. Captain, people can get hurt."
"There's nothing they'll buy they won't need. And that's the market, isn't it, cousin?"
"Not starting gods-be rumors!" Tarras cried, and immediately lowered her voice. "Captain. This isn't right."
She scowled at Tarras, at disloyalty, at a clear challenge to her methods, her character and her ethics.
They had had doubts under aunt Py's command, too, there had been scary, sticky moments, a good many of them here at Kshshti, but, by the gods, the whole crew had stood by her.
Py had a few more gray hairs, be it known. Py and the four senior crew had been in tight spots before they had ever gotten into the mess at Kshshti, and they'd known Pyanfar was smart enough to think her way through it.
But Tarras didn't know that about her. Tarras knew she'd gotten the captaincy because she was Pyanfar's niece, that was what Tarras knew about her, the same thing all Chanur's rivals knew about her.
"If we let this loose," Tarras began.
"It's already loose, cousin, it's already part of the record, what we got at Kita, what we're doing, who we're carrying, where we're going… People watch us, people rake over everything we do… that message stack is in our files because every gods-be station assumes we're in thick with Pyanfar's doings, and all right, why don't we just call up station central and tell them who we've got aboard, what we're carrying, what we think Haisi's up to, why don't we just stand out there and see what happens then, cousin? So we lie to them, so we flash a few pieces of information and let whoever's out there wonder if they've got the picture. If we told the gods-be truth they'd go insane trying to figure out which part of it was a lie."
“I'm not for creating a war scare! I'm not for throwing the whole commodities market on its ear because we've got a problem!"
"So what if there is a war? What if, at least, the mahendo'sat and the stsho are maneuvering for position and somebody's going to double-cross aunt Py and the whole glass house is going to come down? How many people are going to get hurt then? How fast will some kifish hakkikt appoint himself to grab power? The market's a small casualty, cousin. A tick or two in the price of grain's something the smart traders will ride smart and the amateurs are going to get stung with, but I'm not responsible for that. I can't do anything about small investors' mistakes, I'm trying to keep Chanur afloat, I'm trying not to let this blow up in aunt Py's face — which it could — or let Chanur's troubles with the han erode her influence to keep the peace, that's where my thoughts are running, because if you're right, Tarras Chanur, a good many more people can get hurt if the peace goes, than if the market bobbles."
"We don't know what side the stsho is on!" Tarras protested. "We could be doing harm rather than help for all we know!"
"People who do something can always make a mistake. So can people who do nothing."
"That's all fine. Do we know what we're doing?"
"We rattle a few doors and see what puts its head out, cousin. And if you'll do what I ask and publish us on the list, I'll go rattle one in our own basement."
"The stsho?"
"They'd better find out their ambassador here's dead. And the other one's missing. People have already gotten hurt, if you want the morality of it. They're all stsho… but they still count. They're still dead. Somebody was willing to kill them. And we've got a piece of the puzzle on our deck."
"Aye,captain."
So maybe Tarras was easier in her mind. She wasn't. She walked out of the bridge and past na Hallan, who was doing a scrub-down and inventory of the galley cabinets, past Fala, who was doing a life-systems check, and got furtive stares from two eavesdroppers who'd probably rather be in the cold-hold.
Amazing the industry that appeared. She punched the lift button and rode down to lowerdecks, heard the clanks that meant Tiar and Chihin were busy in ops… their refueling and their readiness to move was the number one priority, ahead of cargo, ahead of customs, ahead of any other business.
Gods, she hated politics, she couldn't believe she'd said what she'd said up there… no wonder Tarras was confused.
She walked to the passenger corridor, signaled her intention to open the door, but while she was listening for a response, the door opened, and Dlima, quite nicely painted, gossamer-robed, quite gracious, bowed and let her in.
"Your excellency," Hilfy began, "how have you fared?"
Tlisi-tlas-tin reclined in the bowl-chair, a cup in hand, and gtst beckoned her closer, quite at ease, quite pleased with gtstself and life in general, as seemed. "Will you take tea, captain?"
"Honored." It was the only appropriate answer. She stepped in and settled herself as Dlima brought her a cup and filled it with graceful attention. "Most elegant."
Dlima fluttered, and subsided, tea in hand, to snuggle up to gtst excellency, no trace of the confused person abandoned at Kita Point.
So, so, and so, Hi
lfy thought. Gtst excellency was not suffering. One wasn't so certain about Dlima's mind.
"Tell the captain," Tlisi-tlas-tin said, with a gentle nudge of gtst elbow. "Or shall I?"
Feathery white lashes veiled moonstone eyes, and gtstisi squirmed deeper into the nook against gtst excellency. "I have the rare pleasure to make your honor's acquaintance."
"This is Dlimas-lyi," Tlisi-tlas-tin said, with gtst arm about gtsto and a look of thoroughly foolish contentment on gtst face.
Good, living gods, Hilfy thought in despair.
"Gtstois a person of such inestimable quality, such wonderful refinement… beyond a consolation. I am beyond fortunate."
So Dlima was something like male… as Tlisi-tlas-tin gtstself was something no other sapient species on record had.
"I am ineffably honored by the event." One didn't refer to gender in polite conversation. What she was seeing was intimacy verging on the indecent, by every book on stsho etiquette she had read.
How did one deal with stsho in this condition?
Don't refer bluntly to the integration, the books said.
Don't use the gtsto pronoun without clear permission. Use the universal gtst.
Don't refer to mating.
Don't act embarrassed.
"That gtst excellency has discovered such happiness as my guest," she added desperately, "is a delight and an exquisitely unexpected honor to our hospitality."
Gods rot it. She had business to discuss. Urgent business.'
But gtst was pleased. Gtst sipped gtst tea and gtsto was quick to refill the porcelain cups.
"Such excellent kindness," she said, and gtsto fluttered with pleasure. A spidery white hand reached out to stroke her probably frazzled mane, and she valiantly refused to flinch.
"What a curious and unexpected texture."
If gtsto proposed a threesome she was going to run for it.
"Dlimas-lyi," Tlisi-tlas-tin said gently. "Would you absent yourself? There is such tedious business at hand,"
Dlimas-lyi bowed, and bowed, on the retreat from the bowl-chair. Tlisi-tlas-tin sipped gtst tea and Hilfy did the same.