one-ringed, her beard only beginning, her breeches the tough blue cloth of
hani crew, though she was _Ker_ Hilfy, Chanur's someday heir. She met Tirun
Araun between two aisles of the dock bazaar, among the stacks of cloth,
foodstuffs, the fluttering of stsho merchants. Fluting cries of exotic
nonsapients legal here for trade, the shouts of traders and passersby, music
from the bars of the Rows alongside the market-echoed off the lofty overhead
in one commingled roar. Smells abounded, drowning other scents. Color
rioted. "I've been down every aisle, Tirun--"
"Try the Rows," said Tirun, older spacer. Her beard was full; her mane
hung wild about her shoulders. Her left ear flicked, clashing half a dozen
rings. "Come on. I take evens, you take odds. Hit every bar on the Rows.
He might have, gods only know."
Hilfy gulped air and went, not questioning the orders as Haral herself
had not questioned what had happened, except that something had gone wrong.
Very wrong. That had been a coded call to get off the docks. At once. Her
ears kept lying back on their own; she pricked them up with spasmodic efforts,
seeking a hani voice through the din, from out of the row of spacer bars that
lined the marketplace.
No sign of any hani in the first bar on the row. It was all mahendo'sat
inside, honking music and the raucous screech and stamp of drunken spacers.
She crossed Tirun's path on the walk on the way out and they split again
into the third and fourth bar.
Stsho, this den. But she spotted the red-gold of hani backs clustered
about a bowl-table, dived through and slid to her knees on the rim. A senior
hani spacer turned round and eyed her; other eyes turned her way, all round
the table. She bobbed a hasty bow with hands gripping the rim.
"Hilfy Chanur _par_ Faha, gods look on you -- you seen a hani male?"
Ears laid back and pricked in non-sobriety all round the table, six
pairs of ears heavy with rings. "Gods -- what you been drinking, kid?"
"Sorry." That was a mistake. She scrambled to her feet and started
away; but the spacer swayed erect, waved wildly for balance as she clawed her
unsteady way up the plastic bowlseat to catch her arm. "Hani male, hey? Need
help, Chanur? Where you see this vision, hey?"
There were derisive laughs, curses -- someone was trodden on. The rest
of the hani came up on the seat and scrambled out of the pit. Hilfy tore
loose and fled. "Hey," she heard at her back, hani-cough, a drunken roar.
"Pay!" A shrill stsho warble from another side. "Pay, hani bastard--"
"Charge it to _Ayhar's Prosperity_!"
"O gods!" Hilfy dived for the exit, just as a pair of kifish patrons
loomed in the doorway. Black musty robes brushed her with a smell that sent
the wind up her back. She did not look back or pause as she dived past them
both. "Hard rabble." she heard hissed behind her, the noise of drunken
encounter mingled with kifish voices.
She darted through the outer doors into the light of the market,
blinked, hesitating on one foot, hearing above the market noise the sound of
hani in full chase behind her -- no sight of Tirun. She leaned into a run and
plunged into the next odd-numbered bar -- stsho again, not a sight of hani.
She pelted back out the doors, through the incoming mass of Ayhar clan, who
began a turnabout in that doorway in merry disorder.
Still no Tirun. She dived into the next odd-number, another stsho den,
saw a tall red shape, and heard the voices, a deeper hani voice than this port
had ever heard, the chitter of stsho curses, the snarl of mahendo'sat.
"_Na_ Khym," she cried in profoundest relief. "_Na_ Khym!" She eeled
her way through the towering crowd at the bar and grabbed him by the arm.
"Uncle -- thank the gods. Pyanfar wants you. Now. Right now, _na_ Khym."
"Hilfy?" he said, far from focused. He swayed there, a head taller than
she, twice her breadth of shoulder, his broad, scarred nose wrinkled in