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Chanur's Legacy cs-5

Page 35

by Caroline J. Cherryh


  Hilfy you kill violent right

  all wrong not-low bring choice

  stations death ambassador now change

  listen kif stsho on Meetpoint

  kif now is all governor

  tc'a know guilty party.

  Chanur advises Paehisna-ma-to ((she is) mistaken (about?)) (of the error of?) No'shto-shti-stlen. Hilfy, kitt-ing a violent (person) will be right. All unlawful wrong (deeds) bring choice/change. Stations (because of) death of the ambassador now are changing. Listen, Idf, to the stsho on Meetpoint. Kif, now the governor is falling. The tc'a know the guilty party (incomplete statement.)

  Killing a violent person will be right? Aunt Pyanfar?

  "What is it?" Tiar asked. "What's she talking about?"

  "Gods-be thing's in kifish records too. They sleep-walk, most of them. — Give me the hakkikt!"

  "Aye," Fala said, and the click and hiss of kifish communications came through strongly in her ear-piece.

  "Nakgoth na sti!" she said. "Hilfy Chanur nak, nakgoth na sti, hakkikt-tak skkhta."

  ' 'The ic 'a are most difficult to persuade to lie, '' thevoice came back, cultured and fluent. "In fact, they can't.''

  "Hakkikt,with profoundest regard to your wisdom, this isn't Pyanfar. This isn't right!"

  " Right?" Vikktakkht asked. "What is 'right?’ Tell us 'right,' Chanur captain. We are Pyanfar's allies. Has there been cause for her to change sides in this?''

  Kif would. On a puff of contrary wind. Intellectually Vikktakkht knew that hani were otherwise. In his gut, in a chancy situation, he might not. "Give me a moment," she said, looked desperately at the screen, and made a reach and unbelted, dizzy as she was. She snagged the nutrient pack beside her chair, bit a hole in it and got a swallow down as she was getting up.

  "Captain?" Fala said. "We've got a station message. ''

  "You can't have a station message. We're time-lagged." Another swallow.

  "It says—"

  "It's a gods-be lie-in-wait. Transmitted to our call number from the buoy. They know who we are.

  They've prepped the buoy with a false system schema. What do they say?"

  "It's—" Fala half turned, as she hand-over-handed her way to Fala's station, where the translator main keys were. "They're saying… in the name of the stsho government…"

  … and the han and the hani you are required to dock immediately and open to inspection. You are in violation of Compact Treaty and will be subject to severe criminal penalties if you do not obey instructions. We will accept a single ship in approach with weapons deactivated.

  The ship is cleared for lane 1280. Acknowledge.

  "We're getting the system detail," Tiar said. "What now, captain?"

  "We're getting their word what's in this system, that's what we're getting. Chihin, look alive, Hallan, we're on live-scan only, don't believe a thing station images tell you. Fala, give me the raw data on the tc'a."

  "It matches—"

  "I don't care what it matches, I want to see it, now!"

  The kid was rattled. She shouldn't have yelled. Fala made a false start on the order and a second one and got it.

  Chanur 998 Paehisna-ma-to

  86-786 No 'shto-shti-stlen

  586 8 798-897-22 46 567

  6 57 868-897-22 1872 98

  9-9 786 7 6-75 299-786t

  96 76 10–69 7657 40y8

  786 8=999 8/659 6-976 6–7/0

  5/8 98 768-./768/86S 6868/5.

  "It's not tc'a."

  "How isn't it tc'a?" Fala protested, and Hilfy reached past her, punched up the rough again.

  "It's not tc'a, I've just seen too many of them. You don't get that many unknowns in the transcript. It's driving the translator crazy. — Tiar, course change to that lane and transmit compliance."

  "Captain," Tarras said, and Chihin nearly on top of that.

  "I know. Did I say we were going? — Where did this gods-be thing come from? Na Hallan? Did you capture this transmission?''

  "I — heard them. I think it's what I heard. They were with us… I could hear them. But I couldn't see them, captain."

  "Couldn't see them. 'Couldn't see them' doesn't explain this output. Something odd's going on with it.

  You can't get a capture this clear out of hyperspace."

  "Mechanical?" Fala asked. "Could it be a patch-together? Something the buoy's sending us?"

  The kid was using her head again. Somebody using some complicated equipment might have assembled it out of other tc'a transmissions, and rigged the buoy to send it to their specific ship ID when they dropped in. But she wasn't that sure it was an answer. The Legacy made a gentle burn and she caught at the chair back and the hand-line. "Look sharp, all stations. Don't gawk. They've given us a lane down which they'll be lying in wait, friends, let's not get caught by it. Tarras, missile up."

  "Aye," came the flat acknowledgment.

  "Fala, vertical sort. Read it down."

  Chanur Hilfy Advise you Paehisna- kill ma-to

  Chanur to all stations; listen to the kif and the tc'a. (I?) advise you of the wrongful death (because) kif now know Paehisna-ma-to is guilty of murder of the stsho ambassador. Mistake now will bring violence on all parties. No'shto-shti-stlen makes the right choice to change the governor (on) Meetpoint…

  "Third sort. Diagonal on the left." Gods-rotted matrix brains. "Aye, captain."

  No'shto-shti-stlen: mistake right. Paehisna-ma-to violent choice. Advise killing brings change. Chanur you not-low now Meetpoint. All death ambassador on governor. Stations kif stsho all? listen now is party…

  "Garbage. It's not tc'a. Hani translator, idiomatic, vertical pass."

  "Captain." That from Hallan, quietly.

  "Chain of command. Chain of command, Meras."

  Chanur to all stations: listen to the kif and the tc'a. They will advise you the death was murder. The kif now have proof that Paehisna-ma-to is guilty of the murder of the stsho ambassadorial personnel. A false move now will loose violent behaviors on all fronts. No'shto-shti-stlen made the right choice when he decided to bring in a new governor.

  "It is aunt Py. Gods rot her, why in a mahen hell did she set up a hash like that? Broadcast that translation to the kif. Broadcast it system-wide. And watch it! That's not going to make certain individuals happy—" Meanwhile they were inbound on 1280 with an ambush of some kind set for them, no question. And na Hallan was sitting there with something bursting to say, for which she had no present time. "Fala, get me the hakkikt again. And find out if our passengers are in one piece."

  She oozed back to her chair, fell into it as the earpiece sputtered kifish.

  "Nak."

  "Chanur nak. Pakkaktu hastakkht. 1280 lakau."

  A soft kifish laughter. "Tc'a? Mau Ikkto mekt-hakkikta."

  Put nothing past her.

  She broke off transmission for a second. "Fala, are the stsho alive down there?"

  "Not happy," Fala said. "Alive. Scared. The two in cabin 2. I'm trying to raise the holiness. I'm getting sounds, I can't swear to else."

  She switched Tiraskhti-com in. "We're going in there," she said in the Trade. "I'm calling station, advising them we're going in alone. They don't frighten us." They did, but you didn't explain that to a kifish ally. You didn't stand back here and trade ultimatums with hair-triggered kif and mahendo'sat and hope to avoid escalations.

  Though wherever the trap was, their scan hadn't bounced off anything out there. And the kif hadn't seen anything they were telling about.

  "Captain," Chihin said, "na Hallan thinks there're more ships out there."

  "Where? Vector, Hallan."

  "Up," came the faint answer. "They were there, captain.”

  "Tc'a?"

  "I heard them. I could hear them over the com. I heard something."

  Gods-be spookiness. Chur was spook enough. When you had a neo wandering around in jump, the gods knew what you got. More ships? Messages at the buoy?

  The buoy was the intersection, the place where ships drop
ped toward the local sun. The buoy recorded presences, and hadn't recorded anything but them and the kif.

  Nothing, at least, that that buoy was programmed to confess to the Legacy and its kifish companions.

  But would aunt Py set up a message that ambiguous?

  "More of her gods-be mail," she muttered. "Filtered through a tc'a brain. They've dived down like a fish breaching. They're up there."

  " Hovering in hyperspace?" Tiar said.

  “You can't do that,'' Hilfy said. “You can't change vector in hyperspace, either."

  But knnn did it.

  "I'd hate to pay their fuel load," Tarras said.

  Tc'a did take on fuel, in realspace. Tc'a did pay bills, like the rest of them. There were surely constraints of physics on what they did in hyperspace. But one had to remember that ships didn't entirely enter hyperspace, didn't leave the interface, please the gods they didn't…

  "Message to station," Hilfy said, "we have tc'a ships in the vicinity. A navigational caution is in order."

  Let the mahendo'sat hunter ships lurking out there worry about that one. Tc'a didn't obey lane restrictions. Not on Kshshti docks. Not hi the regulated space around a station.

  And the gods knew, you didn't shoot at one. Never shoot at anything, aunt Py had used to say, that you can't talk to.

  "Let's get us a little more v, Tiar, full 1 g sustained."

  Sustained 1 g push, and one hoped the stsho aboard had taken advice and remained in their beds.

  Things tended to go rapidly to the aft bulkhead under these circumstances.

  "Kkkt," came over her earpiece. "This amuses. We are going with you, Chanur. "

  You didn't tell a kifish hakkikt mind his own business, either. Thank the gods it was only Tiraskhti that moved. And she'd never thought she'd live to say it, but that sleek hunter moving with them was a welcome sight.

  And all those kif out there… if anything happened to the hakkikt, there would be a twenty-way sort-out after the leadership of that fleet. Station surely knew that. Station surely knew that it would be very dangerous to deprive the kif of a leader, if it didn't want a firefight in its territory.

  But one had to ask oneself why station was staying silent — besides the fact it didn't yet know, and wouldn't, for some few minutes, that they had a kif inbound.

  She punched the intercom. "How are you both faring, excellency?"

  "Wai," came the breathless answer. "Wai, the dreadfulness of ships! We are most uncomfortable! I fear for the holiness! I fear for the Preciousness! I fear for our lives!"

  "We're going to cease acceleration, your excellency, in just a few moments. — Tiar, establish Tiraskhti helm, we don't want to surprise them, ustj stay in link with their pilot. — Fala, I'll take your board, get downside, see if gtsta needs attention. — Go inertial, Tiar, at your discretion."

  "Standby."

  The weight that had been pushing them slantwise into their cushions became ordinary, regular orientation revised up and down. "I'm going," Fala said; and Hilfy keyed over to basic com functions on her own board. "Station, this is, inbound on your instructions. Inform gtst excellency No'shto-shti-stlen that we return delighted with our success in gtst instructions."

  That was stshoshi. That for the representatives of the han, who would not bother to learn the language of their trading partners.

  But after the due round-trip time-lapse, mahendi came back: "You stay lane, Chanur ship. Same ask kif ship Tiraskhti. Stay lane. Legal matter here. No gun. "

  A crackle of kifish followed, with no time-lag: Tiraskhti. "In the name of the mekt-hakkikt, we wilt follow the treaty and we will enforce the treaty. Parau'a mekt-hakkikta rassurrn na uunfaura, uunfaura sassurrn ma…"

  Hani, by the gods.

  And from below-decks: "Captain, gtsta is saying something about tc'a and the sun and ker Pyanfar, Something like the stars speaking with one voice…" She could hear the babble from elsewhere, something about star-drives and resonances and talking with the fields… "Otherwise gtsta looks all right. Should I release the netting?"

  "No!" She amended that more quietly. "Tell gtsta where we are, tell gtsta the situation, tell gtsta it's a safety measure, and get your agile young bones up here as fast as you can."

  There still wasn't a guarantee there wouldn't be shooting; but the opposition would have to be crazier than the holiness. The opposition had Meetpoint. The opposition had the Treaty and the Compact itself to hold hostage — because if the opposition didn't start shooting, the opposition held Meetpoint, and Momentum continued on the side of Paehisna-ma-to; while if they started shooting, the mekt-hakkikt's own side would have broken the Treaty. And it all came unraveled from there — even if they had the force to take Meetpoint without damage, which, with a mahen fleet hidden out there — they didn't have.

  Not a nice situation, she said to herself. Not at all a nice situation, Hilfy Chanur. Why did you take the gods-be contract?

  "Berth 22,Legacy," station deigned to say.

  "Are we going to take their computer input?" Tiar asked.

  "No," Hilfy said. "What's one more law? You and Chihin, just figure us in. We'll take their 22. They'll probably have guards. Lots of guards."

  "Kif?" Tarras wondered.

  "I'll bet you they aren't. I'll bet there was a reason old No'shto-shti-stlen had gtstself nose-deep in kif.

  And I'll bet there were casualties. On the other hand—"

  "On the other hand."

  "On the other hand, stsho aren't prone to commit themselves until it's absolutely safe. So cancel the last bet. There may not have been. There may not have been a shot fired here. It's not the han'sstyle. Or Llyene's. Leave that to Paehisna-ma-to. Well, well—"

  She was playing with the optics. Scan wasn't showing the ambush, which in Meetpoint's sparse system didn't leave many points of cover — like keeping the station between them and the opposition, hence the lane assignment; like keeping some of them lying off in the system fringes, like between their ships and system exit, to nadir of the star.

  But ships in dock caught the wan sunlight quite nicely, besides all those working-lamps and warning-lights that kept outside tenders and pushers from going splat! into a station structural part or a ship at dock. Optics was a major function on her board; and she had already been watching and capturing images.

  "Ah. There's Ha'domaren… Not out there where he could get hurt, not our Haisi."

  "Gods rot him," said Tiar.

  "Couple of kif we don't know. Tc'a ship shows up as a seen-before, at Urtur."

  "My heart won't take the surprise," Tiar said.

  "Oh, here's one. Ehrran's Honor."

  "Ehrran!"

  "We do have a han presence here, friends. Can we assume it's that faction which hates us with a passion? We have Paehisna-ma-to's pet hunter captain. We have assorted mahendo'sat, we have—

  Padur's Victory."

  "Blast them if they're in on this!"

  "Could be coincidence. They were coming this way, for probably honest reasons. But I'd sure like to know who was at Hoas while we were at Urtur."

  "What about the Sun?" Hallan asked.

  "I wish I could tell you not." But there it was, in evidence between two other hani ships, Nai's Splendor, and Doran 's Golden Hope. Sahern 's Sun Ascendant, plain to see. "Lslillyest, a good clutch of stsho ships, none of which I know, none of which library knows, which indicates they're not traders, they're from deep inside stsho space… do I guess, the capital at Llyene, if they've set No'shto-shti-stlen aside?"

  "Politics," Tiar said. "Gods, there's something three days dead here."

  "We could get out of here," Chihin said. "We could tell the kif we've had our closer look, goodbye, good luck."

  "They'll outlaw us. They'll have their evidence, a cargo not delivered, right on the books. Chanur will lose this ship, Chanur will lose Momentum with the mahendo'sat."

  "Better free-running than clipped at dock."

  "It's one thing to say, cousin."

&n
bsp; "We're not giving up!"

  "Oh, no, no, no, Chihin."

  "What are we going to do?" Tiar asked.

  "I don't exactly know. Neither do they. They can try their writs and their papers. Those don't make many holes in the hull. And they'll talk to us. Talk is what they're here for. They're here to prove a case against us."

  "It's a trap," Hallan said. "If the Sun's with them, it's a trap — they're going to file some complaint, captain."

  "Good lad, good thinking. Gods-be right they are."

  "I don't want to get you in trouble."

  She had to laugh. Probably to Hallan Meras it wasn't funny.

  "They're not getting him back," Chihin said.

  "Just run the calc," she said. "First thing is not to hit the station. Then we'll worry about Sahern clan.

  They're a minor problem."

  "It's not a minor problem," Chihin said.

  "Say he's not going to Sahern. It's one thing for me to throw him off. No gods-be Sahern is taking him.

  Two plus two, cousin, let me handle the legal work, you have your hands full and I don't want to make a mistake here. Fala, you want to make another run belowdecks?"

  "Aye, captain, I will."

  "I'd say we have another half hour. Get down there, there's some shifting about I want done. You mayhave to do take-hold down there. Have something in mind."

  "Aye, captain."

  Nervy kid. It was a dangerous thing, moving about in approach. Things could happen. But the stray cargo pusher that happened into the Legacy's path was going to be out of luck.

  "Captain," Tarras said, "I'm still holding that missile live."

  "That's where you're to hold it."

  "Just confirming," Tarras said. "Thank you."

  Calc was shaping up. Fala called up for instructions. Station called to protest they were out of calibration, check their computers.

  "Oh, we're not using your feed," Hilfy delighted to say. "Since you can't prove you're authorized. We'll just guess our way in."

  "You damn fool!" Meetpoint Control screamed.

  "How are we doing, Tiar?"

  "Oh, maybe five, ten percent one way or the other. Who knows?"

  "You lose your license!"

  "Hope we're good, Meetpoint. Or give us No'shto-shti-stlen."

 

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