by neetha Napew
“No.” He was lean but otherwise healthy. There wasn’t much I could do, now that TssVar suspected about the two Isalth-ios, and it frustrated me. “I’ll make sure I record who you’re sold to, and once we’re liberated, I’ll do everything I can to recover you.”
“Liberated?” Gael glanced around, then lowered his voice. “What’s this about now?”
“Long story.” I took out my scanner and activated it. “Hold still, and let me at least look like I’m evaluating you.”
“I hoofed about, looking for one of them grand tunnels, but no luck here.” Gael gnawed at his lower lip. “That rapid skin of yours, Noarr, could he help me to bolt outta here?”
“I’m not even sure where I can find him.” I finished the scan and noted the results on the data pad. Then I saw the determined glint in his eye. “Don’t think about doing something stupid and getting yourself shot.”
“If someone’s coming here to millie up, I’d like to be in on the ructions.” He smacked his closed fist into his other palm. “I’ve foostered longer on this rock than most of the knackers here. I’m gummin’ to lose the head.”
He was right. “Okay, let me see if I can track Noarr down somehow. Just don’t start losing the head with the guards until I get back.”
I used the excuse of the contagion to postpone the slave auction, leave the trade area, and return to the infirmary. The only quick way I could find Noarr was by using my friend Alunthri to track his scent through the tunnels, so I had the Chakacat brought to me on the pretense of screening it for the contagion.
Alunthri acted suitably feral until the centurons departed, then dropped the wildcat pose at once. “What is wrong, Cherijo?”
I took the small swatch of robe from my tunic pocket-okay, I’d been saving it for stupid, sentimental reasons-and handed it to my friend. “I have to find this male. Can you track him down for me?”
Alunthri sniffed the fabric, then the hard surface of the floor. “Most scent-paths have been eradicated by the Lok-Teel. I cannot track him in this manner.”
Which meant we’d probably get lost in the tunnels, even if they were still passable. I thought for a moment. “What if you were able to smell the prisoners? He may be wearing a disguise when he works inside the compound, but he’d still smell the same. Would that work?”
It would.
“Are you sure your nose is working right?”
We had spent a day going through the prisoner population, with no luck. If Noarr had been in the compound, Alunthri would have tracked him down. The only place it scented Noarr was in the infirmary, and outside Srrovar’s central chamber. Those recent scents hadn’t yet been eradicated by the ever-busy Lok-Teel, it told me, but they were still very faint.
I’d taken the precaution of tallying up the prisoners we checked, and discovered the prison population matched the current statistics on the Hsktskt database. Which meant Noarr wasn’t currently posing as a slave, or there would be a one prisoner difference between the figures.
Since I had no evidence that the fake contagion had spread, TssVar ordered the slave auction to continue and for me to get the inspections finished.
I knew Gael was depressed by the news, but he simply thanked me for trying.
“I can get in touch with your family on Terra, as soon as we’re out of here,” I offered. “At least they’ll know you’re still alive, until we can free you from whoever buys you.”
“That’d be murder,” Gael said, and got an odd look on his face. “Ma and Da did a flit from Clare with the rest of the Kellys. Thick as ditches, they were, barreling from Terra to an agri-colony. New-Eire, they meant to call it. Planned to be culchies, raise sheep and crops, the dense bollocks.” He made a harsh sound. “Made a right hames of it. The thicks belted our ship, banjaxed it. Everyone died but me.”
Blast my thoughtless tongue. “I’m sorry, Gael.”
“They were plonkers, thinking they could scrap with the thicks.” He stared past me at the wall, then shook his head. “Sorry, dote. I’m being annoying, aren’t I?”
“Be as annoying as you like.” I pressed my hand over his. “We’ll find a way to set you free, I promise.”
Just before the auction began, I took my usual position behind one of the pillars so I could record who went where. That was where Noarr found me.
A warm flipper descended on my shoulder. “Cherijo.”
I nearly dropped my data pad and whirled around. “Noarr!” I lowered my voice to a murmur. “God, don’t do that, you scared me.” I peered into his hood. “Are you okay?”
“I have been better.” He appraised the sight of the traders bidding for a pair of Cordobels for a moment. “I am told you need my assistance moving some prisoners off Catopsa.”
“Yes. Paul Dalton and Geef Skrople have to get to the surface to signal the rescue forces.” I quickly explained the approaching invasion fleet and what the two engineers needed. “There’s also a Terran, Gael Kelly, the one we rescued from the crying chambers. We could use him to help move the prisoners out of the compound. But he’s up for auction today.”
“I remember him.” Noarr’s humming voice grew harder. “You care for him.”
“Yeah, I do.” This was all I needed. A jealous slave-runner on my hands. I lifted my scanner to check the injury I knew was on his side and his flipper caught my wrist. “Don’t be a baby, let me do a quick scan.”
“I am fine.” He pushed my hand away. “Dalton and Skrople can be moved. Kelly I can do nothing for. There is no access to this area of the compound, and what tunnels I have in the proximity are completely blocked off by black growth.”
“Okay.” I wasn’t happy about abandoning Gael, but there was only so much we could do. “We’ll track him down after the liberation.”
“Kelly will not be sold, I think.”
“Why, because he’s a troublemaker?”
“No one will offer for him. I must go now.” Noarr stepped back, but I reached and latched on to one sleeve. “There is more?”
“Yeah, there is.” I slipped my arms around his waist and rested my head against his chest for a moment. “Thanks, Osepeke.”
His flipper touched my hair. “Be careful, Waenara.”
The only other good thing that happened that day was watching Gael Kelly stand on the platform, and seeing the instant looks of dislike pass over the faces of the assembled traders.
Noarr’s prediction came true. No one offered a single credit for the Terran. Gael’s notorious reputation as a habitual escapee had actually saved him.
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
Persuading the Pel
We managed to keep up the facade of the contagion for another week without the Hsktskt becoming suspicious. Paul told me Noarr had contacted him to make the arrangements for the move to the surface as soon as he detected the JorenianIAksellan forces approaching Catopsa.
“The Hsktskt will pick them up on their scanners, too.” I was worried this rescue attempt would end up starting another war. “How are you going to deal with that?”
Paul gave me a mysterious smile. “We’ve figured out how to handle that, too. Don’t worry, Doc.”
“’Don’t worry, Doc.’ ‘We’ll handle it, Doc.’ Oh sure. Then it’s ‘Can you sew up this hole they blasted through my belly, Doc?’ “ I snorted. “You’d better make sure you can handle it.”
Gael Kelly came to see me in the infirmary toward the end of the week. He had been returned to his tier, and had managed to get into another fight with a guard. I sutured his gashed abdomen and lectured him on being more cautious, too.
He was quiet-a little too quiet for my liking. “What’s wrong? Are you in pain somewhere else and not telling me?”
“Doc, I heard... a bit of news.” He looked miserable. “You need to be wide about this. Dog wide.”
I dressed the wound lightly and helped him back into his tunic. “I’ll be a bridge, if you like. Just tell me in stanTerran, Gael.”
“Okay.” He wiped the sweat fro
m his brow with the back of his hand and eased off the exam table. “I’ve been listening in on the thicks’ gobbing, uh, conversations. Trying to learn if they know anything about the liberation plans.” He dropped his gaze. “I heard three of them talking about a meeting SrrokVar was having with a special prisoner on the tier.
“I slipped down to the tier controller’s office and listened at the door panel. SrrokVar was talking to someone. He said pretending to help the knackers do a bunk from that feck hole of his was brilliant, and it was too bad the tunnels were mucked or they could keep using them to taking the knackers to the execution grounds.” Gael’s voice became very gentle. “Then I heard the sleeven say he would find another way to do it. It was that skin of yours. The tall one.”
“No.” My throat dried up. “You’re wrong. He must have been talking to someone else. It’s not Noarr.”
Gael looked at me then. “God forgive me, dote, but it was. I know his voice.” As I sat numbly down on the chair next to the exam table, the Terran pulled the partition closed and came to me. “I’m so sorry.”
So Noarr had lied to me, and was working for the lizards. How could I have trusted him? Believed in him? “I’m an idiot. A complete, blind idiot.”
“No.” Gael pressed a kiss on the top of my head. “You’re an amazing bird, you are.”
I lifted my face and found Gael’s mouth on mine a second later. I froze, burning with humiliation and embarrassment. Because I felt sorry for him, I let him kiss me. It soothed my shattered nerves, but I felt nothing beyond that.
Gael’s body pressed into mine. He was breathing hard, his heart pounding, his limbs trembling. His hands stroked up my back and moved around to caress my breasts. The ridge of his erection pressed lightly against my stomach.
“Slagging bastard. It’s mortifying, how he’s had you on.” He buried his mouth against my neck. “I won’t let him make a hash out of you, dote. Not ever again. I’ll look out for you.”
I couldn’t do this, I thought, and carefully stepped away, out of his embrace. “I’m sorry, Gael.”
Gael’s face reddened. “Even knowing what a caffler he is, you-“
“No. This isn’t about Noarr.” I let my sorrow and sympathy show through. “I’m sorry.”
“Right jibber, you are. Or a brasser. I can’t decide which.” The Terran strode out of the infirmary.
I was voting for complete fool myself.
Alunthri was waiting in Reever’s chamber when I went off shift. It took one look at my face and started preparing a server of tea for me.
“Hey.” I peeled off my outer tunic and dropped onto a chair. “I thought we agreed you wouldn’t do that.”
“We’re both slaves now.” Alunthri calmly padded over and placed the server on the table before me. “Something has happened. Something that hurt you.”
I took a sip and winced as the hot liquid scalded my tongue. “You’re psychic.”
“I’m your friend. I know you.”
Tears spilled down my face as I buried it in my arms and let go. I felt Alunthri’s palm stroking my back as I wept, and thanked whatever God or fate had brought one true friend into my life. Ultimately, I pulled myself together. “Sorry.”
Alunthri mopped me up, made me more tea, and listened as I related what Gael had told me.
“The worst part is, I swore I’d never trust anyone again. Then Noarr comes along, and seems like everything good and fine in a man, and crash, there go my walls.” I finished the tea and blew my nose. “It was as bad as that moment I saw you on the Perpetua, and knew Reever had kidnapped you from Garnot just as leverage against me.”
Alunthri sat back in its chair and made an odd noise. “Cherijo, there is something you are not aware of. Reever did not kidnap me.”
I put my server down and had to quickly right it before it fell over. “What are you talking about?”
“Reever did not kidnap me. The Garnotans are not artists, Cherijo. There is no artists’ colony on that world.” All around its neck, silvery fur rose. “They are slavers.”
“What?” I got to my feet. “Alunthri, I went down there. I saw those people. They were all... they weren’t really artists?”
“I am sorry to say they are not. Their pretense draws the unsuspecting to the planet. It’s all a sham. Garnot is a slaver-depot. Just like this one.” Alunthri bared its teeth in a silent snarl. “They had me chained and in a holding pit before the Sunlace left orbit. One of them said I would fetch a good price from Chakaran traders.”
“I left you there. I should have checked that place out more thoroughly, damn it.” My brow furrowed. “So Reever... what, bought you?”
“I do not know if credits were exchanged. Hsktskt centurons removed me from the slave pits and brought me directly to Joren and the Perpetua. By the time we arrived, Reever and the Hsktskt had gained control of the League fleet.”
Which I’d helped them do. Willingly. Cheerfully.
“You carry much blame for the actions of others, Cherijo. What happened to me on Garnot is not your fault. Nor is the betrayal of someone you thought a friend.”
“I have no friends, except you.” I laughed bitterly. “Isn’t that awful? But it’s true. I can’t trust anyone. Not Reever, not Noarr.” I wiped the last traces of tears from my face as Reever walked through the door panel. “A blinding example of my own lousy judgment.”
“I beg your pardon?” Reever said.
“Never mind.” I got up and trudged over to my sleeping platform. “Alunthri is staying with us tonight.” I glanced back at the big cat. “You don’t mind sleeping on the sofa, do you?”
It knew I didn’t want to be alone with Reever now. “Not at all, Cherijo.”
I silently cried myself to sleep that night, and several nights following that. Reever made a few comments, but otherwise left me alone. Noarr didn’t attempt to make contact. The moment he did, I was going to add a few more swirls to that face of his.
Everything seemed to decelerate to slow motion as we waited for the JorenianIAksellan forces to reach Catopsa. The days dragged while the tension mounted. Prisoners avoided congregating in groups to prevent the guards from overhearing any plans being made. We simply had to hold on until help arrived.
Someone got suspicious anyway.
I was summoned by FurreVa early one morning to slave tier six, where she and her guards had started making a surprise inspection of the prisoner chambers. I found her standing in front of an access door that had been smashed. Shards peppered the floor around her.
For a moment, I simply stared. What had happened to the quasi-quartz to make it break like this? No one had been able to make a scratch on it for months. None of the Hsktskt had any unusual devices or weapons. Then I saw black streaks running through the bits all around my feet, and peered into the tunnel.
The black growths were gone. They’d somehow gotten into the walls.
“We discovered this passage. What is it?” FurreVa asked me.
“I have no idea.” I looked as confused as I felt. “What broke the wall?”
“Her.” FurreVa pointed to a large, muscular female prisoner being held by three centurons. “And him.” An injured centuron lay on his side, clutching a certain vulnerable portion of his anatomy. Dozens of transparent shards gleamed, imbedded in the thick scales along his outer arm.
I seized on the medical problem to avoid dealing with more questions about the crystal. “Let me get him to the infirmary.”
TssVar ordered his centurons to search the entire compound, of course. Once I’d finished removing the quasi-quartz from the injured guard’s hide, I was summoned to accompany one of the teams sweeping the tiers for more hidden passageways.
I didn’t want to go. Didn’t want to find the Hsktskt dragging Noarr out of some hidden corner. I ended up on Reever’s team, which only made things worse. He positioned himself at my side and watched my every movement. Keeping up a bland, indifferent expression while I watched the guards smash their weapon butts i
nto the prison walls was a real challenge.
FurreVa’s team joined ours. Then GothVar and his squad. No one looked very happy to see each other. Something bad was going to happen. Really bad. I could feel it, like a palpable force, tightening around me.
Another tunnel was exposed, right in front of my eyes. I spotted the barely noticeable dark veins, and tried not to react. The centuron must have noticed them, too. He heaved the end of his rifle into the center of the thinly webbed surface. The mirrored panel didn’t crack. It shattered, spilling tiny, black-shot shards all around our feet. Centurons disappeared into the small tunnel, searching for concealed prisoners.
Reever stared at me. I shook some shards from the top of my footgear and didn’t return the favor. GothVar trudged over and planted himself in front of me.
“She knew about this,” he said, stroking the pulse rifle’s trigger with two claws.
“You think so?” I gave him a thin smile. “Prove it.”
The centurons called to Reever from the tunnel, and he gave me a final glare before stepping through the entrance. A moment later, he came out and beckoned to me. “Cherijo, I need you to look at this.”
Was it Noarr? My bruised heart turned over in my chest. Was he hurt, had someone-“Right. Coming.”
Reever disappeared into the dark ahead of me. More veins laced the inner tunnel surfaces, creating shadows that thickened several feet in until they solidified to form an impenetrable expanse of solid black. With all the light gone, I felt my way by walking with one hand against a wall. A centuron outlined in the frame of another shattered access door curled a limb toward me, and I headed in his direction.
The tunnel emptied out into an equipment storage area, and a strange sense of déjà vu swept over me when I saw Reever kneeling next to something small and white.
Suddenly I flashed back to the incident on the Perpetua. Level eighteen. The sharp, poisonous smell of ammonia. A lump of what appeared to be melted chalk.
I slowly removed my scanner, passed it over the residue, and recited the readings. “Hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, calcium, and phosphorous. Minute amounts of deoxyribonucleic acid.”