C. J. Cherryh - Chanur 2 - Chanur's Venture

VIP免费
2024-12-16 0 0 291.68KB 115 页 5.9玖币
侵权投诉
------------------------
C.J. Cherryh
Chanur's Venture (c)1984
DAW Science Fiction
e-text version 1.0
------------------------
Chapter One
The encounter of old friends was common enough on Meetpoint Station,
where half a dozen species came to trade; and one such old friend came walking
Pyanfar Chanur's way when she had no more than put _The Pride_ in dock. She
was hani, Pyanfar Chanur, maned and bearded in curling red-gold, sleek of
pelt. Her left ear bore the gold rings of successful voyages along its rim,
and the bottommost ring had a monstrous gaudy teardrop pearl. Her red
blousing breeches were silk, with the faintest striping of orange; and wrapped
about the waist was a belt whose dangling ties were finished in precious
stones and gold and bronze. She was not quiet, this Pynafar. She exuded
wealth and dignity, and drew eyes wherever she went.
And rounding a collection of canisters awaiting dockside pickup, she
spied a dark-furred, all but naked shape: mahendo'sat -- ordinary encounter
anywhere on Meetpoint. But this one flung wide his arms. His eyes lit up,
his broad mahen face broke into a charming grin that showed blunt primate
fangs all capped in gold.
"Pyanfar!" he cried.
"_You?_" Pyanfar stopped dead in her tracks. "You!" She slapped aside
the offered embrace and stalked past at a good clip, to make the mahendo'sat
exert himself.
"Ha, hani captain," the mahe called after her. "You want deal?"
She turned about again, planted hands on hips and let the mahe overtake
her against all better judgment. A heavy hand descended on her shoulder and
the mahe resumed his gilt-edged grin.
"Long time," Goldtooth said.
"Gods rot you, don't grin at me. You want a smile from me, you mahen
bastard? How'd you get in port?"
"Just docked. Find my good friend here. Give surprise, a?" He laughed,
slapped her on the back, seized her about the shoulders in one lank, coarse-
pelted arm and propelled her toward the ship berths. "Got present, hani."
"Present!" Pyanfar dug claws into the deck-plates, resisting this
camaraderie, aware of probable witnesses, of a whole row of grinning
mahendo'sat lazing in front of a canister-surrounded loading area. A ship
access gaped ahead. _Mahijiru_, doubtless. "You owe me, mahe, owe me for
tools and two good welders, for fake repairs, for doublecross--"
"Good friend, Pyanfar Chanur." A powerful arm shoved her ramp ward
through the gathered mahendo'sat, and she spun about and cast an indignant
look back before Goldtooth wrapped his arm into a tighter grip and hastened
her up the ramp. "Good friend. Remember I save your neck, a?"
"Present," she muttered, stalking along the accessway. "Present." But
she went, and stopped inside the lock, while some of the mahendo'sat who had
trooped after them poured past into the interior corridors. Goldtooth turned
sober for the moment, and she liked that less. Her ears were flat. "What
_kind_ present, huh?"
The mahe winked, decidedly a wink, this trader who was no trader, who
played what he was not, with _Mahijiru_ which was not the slow-moving
freighter it looked to be. "Good see you one piece, hani."
"Huh." Her mouth pursed in better humor, in deliberate good humor. She
slapped the mahe on the arm, claws not quite pulled. "Same good see you, Ana
Ismehanan-min. You still play merchant?"
"We trade sometime, keep us same honest."
"Present, a?"
The mahe looked to his left where the towering black wall of mahe crew
parted. Pyanfar looked -- and her ears went up and her mouth fell open at the
gangling stsho-cloaked apparition in the doorway to _Mahijiru_'s inmost
corridors. A mostly hairless face with mane and beard like spun daylight; a
face like nothing in civilized space.
"O gods," she said, and whirled about, heading for the airlock, but the
mahendo'sat had it packed.
"Pyanfar," the human said.
She turned, ears flat. "Tully," she said in despair, and lost the rest
of her dignity as the human hastened to fling his arms about her. His clothes
reeked of mahen incense.
"Pyanfar," Tully said, and straightened up and towered over her,
grinning like a mahe and trying to stop it, for he knew better. "_Py-an-
far_." In evident delight.
That was the limit of his conversation. That mouth was never made for
hani speech. Goldtooth set his hand possessively on Tully's shoulder and
squeezed.
"Fine present, a, Pyanfar?"
"_Where'd you find him?_"
The mahen captain shrugged. "Come all the way mahen trader name _Ijir_,
long time mahen ship, all time want you, Pyanfar Chanur, crazy mad human.
Come find you, come find you, all he know."
She looked up at Tully, who stood there with something brimming over in
him, who had no possible business where he was, in mahendo'sat transport,
light-years from human territory, in a zone where humankind was banned.
"No," she said to Goldtooth. "No. Absolutely not. He's your problem."
"He want find you," Goldtooth said. "Friend. Where your sentiment?"
"Gods rot you -- gods rot you, Goldtooth. Why? For what? What's he
want?"
"Want talk you. Your friend, hani, good friend, a?"
"_Friend_. You earless, mangy bastard. I just got my papers clear --
_You know what it cost?_"
"Trade." Goldtooth came close and put his arm conspiratorially about her
shoulders. She stood like rock, laid back her ears and grinned into his face
in chill reception. "Trade, hani. You want make deal?"
"You want to lose that arm?"
Primate fangs gleamed gold. "Rich, hani. Rich -- and powerful. You
want this human trade? Got. --Look this face--"
"Have I got a choice?"
A wider grin. "Loyal friend. Want you do a thing for me. Want you
make this human happy, a? Want you take him to Personage. Want you take him
to the _han_. Make all round happy. Got trade, hani. Profits."
"Sure, profits." She shoved back at arm's length and stared up at that
earnest mahen face. "Profits like last time, like bills up to the overhead,
like hani barred six months from Meetpoint and _The Pride_ out a gods-rotted
_year_--"
"Like stsho got lot gratitude hani save their hides, a?"
"Same as the mahendo'sat. Same as the mahe who double-crossed me--"
Black palms lifted. "Not my fault, not my fault. Stsho close
Meetpoint, what I do?"
"Snatch the trade, what else? What route you been running?"
"You take him, a?"
"You brought him here. Friend. It's all yours. So's the lawsuit. You
explain it to the stsho!"
"Got _trade_, Pyanfar-"
"And get embargoed? Gods rot, you earless lunatic! You try to do for
the rest of my business? The stsho--"
"Pyanfar." He took her by both shoulders. "Pyanfar. I tell you, one
paper this human got, he read for you this paper. They send him, this
humanity. They got trade. Big business, maybe much big thing the Compact
ever see. You got share."
She drew a deep, long, mahe-flavored breath. "Favors, Goldtooth?"
"A," he laughed, and hugged her shoulder with bone-crushing force.
"Promise, hani. I make promise, keep. Got business. Got go. You take this
human. Don't I make promise you get share human trade? I keep. This human
come to me, I find my old friend Pyanfar for him. You want share, you take.
But you got do this thing."
"Now we get to it. Why?"
"Got business. Got go fix."
"Got business -- How'd you get here? How'd you just happen to pull in
on my tail?"
"Know you come, old friend. I lie off and wait."
"How'd you know? I didn't, till the papers cleared at Kura."
"Got contacts. Know you got that stsho business clear. So you come
here soon."
"Gods rot your hide, mahe. That's a lie."
Dark eyes glittered, shifted. "Say then I follow you from Urtur."
"With _him_? Out of mahen space? No way, egg-sucker. How'd you
arrange it?"
The hand dropped from her shoulder. "You sharp dealer, hani."
"What say instead the stsho kept _Mahijiru_ off Meetpoint docking lists.
Say you were here all along, blocked off the lists. Waiting for me."
"You got lot suspicion."
"I got gods-rotted plenty suspicion, you earless foundling bastard.
Give me the truth."
"Might say."
"Might say. Might say -- The stsho know he's here?"
"Know."
"Then who are you hiding from?" And on a second thought: "_O gods!_"
"Got kif trouble."
"Gods rot you, then _you_ take him! You take this whole business and--"
"Good, brave friend. Kif spies already here. _Han_ spies too. Got
_han_ deputy ship in port. Know we meet. After this they got plenty
curiosity. So you got risk already, hani. Don't want profit too? Besides,
you hurt his feeling. Hurt mine."
She stood still, a long, long time. Her claws flexed out. She drew
them in, with a long slow breath. "Gods rot your--"
"Give you fair deal, Pyanfar. Number one fine deal. Know you got
troubles. You got _han_ trouble. You promise human trade, you don't got.
Lose face. You got mate troubles--"
"Shut up."
"I keep promise, Pyanfar. You want share profit, you got share risk."
"Share suicide. What you think I am?"
"You get human trade, your enemies can't touch you, a, hani captain?
The _han_ -- don't like you lose face. You get rich, keep your brother life,
keep your mate. Keep _The Pride_."
A narrow darkness closed in on her sight, hunter-vision set on
Goldtooth. It was difficult to hear, so tight her ears were folded. She
deliberately raised them, looked about her, at Tully's distressed face.
"I take him," she said to Goldtooth, a small, strangled breath. "If--"
"If?"
"--if we get letter of credit at mahe facilities. Good anywhere.
Unlimited."
"God! You think I Personage?"
"I think you next best thing, you rag-eared conniving bastard! I think
you got that power, I think you got any gods-rotted credit you want, like what
you pulled on me at Kirdu, like--"
"You dream." Goldtooth laid a blunt-clawed hand on his breast. "I
captain. Got no credit like that."
"Good-bye." She faced about, bared teeth at the crowd blocking her
retreat. "You going to move this lot? Or do I move them for you?"
"I write," he said.
She faced him with ears flat. Held out her hand.
He held out his to one of the mahe at his side. "Tablet," he said, and
that one vanished hurriedly into the inner corridor with a spatter of bare
mahen feet and non-retracting claws.
"Better," said Pyanfar.
Goldtooth scowled, took the tablet the breathless mahe brought back to
him, removed its stylus and wrote. He withdrew a Signature from the belt that
crossed his chest and inserted it; the tablet spat out its seal-stamped
document. He held it.
"I'll translate that," Pyanfar said, "first thing."
"You one bastard, Pyanfar." Goldtooth's grin looked astonishingly hani
in his dark mahen face. "One sure bastard. No--" He drew it back as she held
out her hand; he turned and handed it instead to Tully, who looked at them
both confusedly. "Let him hold. He bring. With other documents."
"If that paper doesn't say what it had better say--"
"You do what? Toss good friend Tully out airlock? You no do."
"Oh, no. No such thing. I pay debts where they're due, old friend."
Goldtooth's grin spread. He thrust the tablet into a crewman's hands
and clapped her on the arm. "You thank me someday."
"You can bet I will. Everything I owe. I find a way. How you going to
get him to _The Pride_? Tell me that! You walk him up to my lock, I fix your
ears."
"Got special canister." Goldtooth held out his hand. "Customs papers,"
he said, and a crewman held out another tablet and stylus. "You take cargo,
a? _Shishu_ fruit. Dried fish. Got four cans. One all rigged, number one
good lifesupport. Pass him that way."
She shook her head to clear it, stared at him afresh. "I'm going mad.
That trick's got white hairs. Why don't you just roll him up in a carpet, for
the gods' sake, and dump him on my deck? Deliver him in a basket, why don't
you? Good gods, what am I doing here?"
"Still good trick. You want this honest citizen, you pay duty, ha?"
She drew her ears down tight, snatched the tablet and furiously appended
her own signature, handwritten. She shoved it back at the mahe crewman who
dared no expression at her at all.
"Fish," she said in disgust.
"Cheapest duty. What you want, pay more? I tell you, got thing fixed."
"I'll bet you do."
"Customs ask no question. Number one fixed."
"I've got questions. I've got plenty of questions. You set me up, you
egg-sucking bastard. So I take this deal. But by-the-gods you tell me
everything you know. _What_ kif trouble? Where are they working? Are they
on your tail right now?"
"Always got kif at Meetpoint."
"Then why come here, for the gods' sakes? What are you doing here? The
kif know what you've got?"
Goldtooth shrugged. "Maybe."
"From how long? How long you been at this?"
A second shrug. "Packet. In packet got paper tell you. Tully bring in
canister. You take, you read all. You run fast. Go Maing Tol, go Personage.
Get plenty help from there."
"They on your tail?"
A third shrug.
"Goldtooth, you bastard, how tight?"
"Got trouble," Goldtooth said.
She weighed that. _Mahijiru_ in trouble. A mahen hunter-ship with more
kif troubles than it could handle. "So you got. Where you go now?"
"Best thing you don't ask."
"Human space?"
"Maybe deep in stsho territory. Read packet. Read packet. Friend."
"Rot you."
"Rot you too," Goldtooth said soberly. His ears stayed up. There were
fine wrinkles round his dark eyes. "God save us. Need you, Pyanfar. Need
bad."
"Huh." She flicked her ears up with a light chiming of their rings.
"I'm not a gods-blessed warship, mahe."
"Know that."
"Sure. Sure." She walked off a pace to get clear breath, looked at
Tully, who understood -- perhaps a little. Always more than he spoke.
Tully would not lie to her. That much she believed. His silence, his
level, unflinching stare now, that vouched for his own honesty in this. "When
bring to you?" Goldtooth asked. She turned back to him. "Got an appointment
in station office. Got to make that. Got to advise my crew. Got to tell
them -- You give me lot of problems, hear? And you be careful." She extruded
a claw and poked Goldtooth hard in the chest, so she saw him wince. "You be
careful this package. You be gods-rotted careful, hear?" She meant two
things.
"Hear," Goldtooth said, full soberly. He heard both things. She knew.
"Got three days this port," she said. "Got stall three days with gods-
rotted kif sniffing round. I pull _The Pride_ out sooner, big trouble. Lot
of attention. When you go?"
"Deliver package, wait awhile, then go. Got no cargo but fake cans I
give to you."
"So." She turned away, met Tully's eyes, patted him very gently on his
arm, recalling his fragile skin. "_Safe_, understand. You do what they say.
No fear. These mahendo'sat bring you to me. Understand?"
"Yes," Tully said, and looked at her in that way he had, his pale stare
desperately intense.
Her ears twitched, her nostrils widened with the scent of something more
than Meetpoint-sized amiss, more than a corrupt stsho and closed routes and
xenophobe stsho councils back in Llyene, atwitter over humanity that wanted
_through_ stsho space. Mahen connivances. Kif greed. She looked back at
Goldtooth. "Presents. One fine present. Ha!"
Goldtooth lifted his head, his brown eyes half-lidded. "Tell you this,
old friend. Kif don't forget. They hunt me. Soon hunt you. Not revenge.
Kif-thought. _Skikkik_. Hunt me, hunt you. Tully come here -- Got one fine
trouble this time. This business Tully bring us only -- hurry things. Make
timetable ours, not kif's."
"Huh," she said. "So I take this gift. I don't like things coming at
my back. You watch yourself. You run far, mahe. You do good. Wish you
luck."
"You got," Goldtooth said. "Wish you luck, hani."
She flicked her ears, indecisive, turned and stalked out the airlock
through the parting crowd of tall mahendo'sat.
_Luck._
Luck indeed.
Her mind was not in it as she walked on down the dock. It kept sorting
troubles past and troubles future -- _dangerous_, she thought, catching a
whiff of some scent not mahendo'sat nor stsho, but something she could not, in
this large, cold space . . . identify.
Cargo, maybe. Maybe something else. It set her nose to twitching and
set an itch between her shoulderblades.
She did not look about, here on Meetpoint's docks, padding along the
cold deckplates, beside the gapings of ship accesses, out of which wafted more
friendly scents. There were other hani ships at Meetpoint. She had read the
list before she had put _The Pride_ into dock: _Marrar's Goiden Sun_;
_Ayhar's Prosperity_; oh, yes, and _Ehrran's Vigilance_. That ship. That
one, that Goldtooth had mentioned, but not by name . . . that _han_'s eyes,
which were doubtless on other business at the moment, but which were capable
of catching small furtive moves -- like a Chanur captain paying calls on mahen
ships.
There were a dozen other mahen vessels in port: _Tigimiransi_,
_Catimin-shai_, _Hamarandar_ were some she had known for years. And familiar
stsho names, like _Assustsi, E Mnestsist_, _Heshtmit_ and _Tstaarsem Nai_.
Round the wheel of Meetpoint, beyond the great lock that separated oxy- from
methane-breathers, ships went by stranger titles: tc'a and knnn and chi
names, if knnn had names at all. _Tho'o'oo_ and _T'T'Tmmmi_ were tc'a/chi
ships she had seen on docking lists before.
And kif. Of course there were kif. She had made a particular point to
know those names before she put _The Pride_ in dock . .. names like _Kekt_
and _Harukk_, _Tikkukkar_, _Pakakkt_, _Maktikkh_, _Nankktsikkt_, _Ikhoikttr_.
Kif names, she memorized wherever she found them, a matter of policy -- to
recall their routes, their dockings, where they went and trading what.
The kif watched her routes with as much interest this last year. She
was very sure of that.
She did not loiter on the docks, but she made no particular haste which
might attract attention on its own. She stared at this and that with normal
curiosity, and at the same general pace she strolled up to the nearest com
booth along the row of dockside offices, keyed up Chanur credit and punched in
the code for the station comlink to _The Pride_'s bridge. She waited. The
com whistled and clicked through nine cycles unanswered.
There was a kif on the docks. She spied the tall, black-robed form
standing over shipside in conversation with a stsho, whose pale arms waved
emphatically. She stood with her back to the plastic wall and watched this
exchange past the veil of other traffic, the passing of service vehicles, of
pedestrians, mostly stsho, pale-robed and elegant; here and there mahen-
do'sat, dark and sleek. Something winged whipped past, small and upward bound
for the heights of the tall, cold dock.
Gods only knew what that was.
_Click_. "_Pride of Chanur_," the voice finally answered. "Deck
officer speaking."
"Haral, gods rot you, how long does it take?"
"Captain?"
"Who's out?"
"Outside?"
"_I want that cargo inventoried_. Hear? I want all of you on it, right
now. No liberties. If anyone's out, get her back. Right now."
"Aye," the voice came back, diffident. "Aye, Captain." There was
question in the voice.
"Just do it!"
"Aye. But -- Captain?"
"What?"
"_Na_ Khym's out."
"Gods and thunders!" Her heart fell through her feet. "Where'd he go?"
"Don't know. To the free market, I think -- There some kind of
trouble?"
"I'm coming back. _Get him_, Haral. I want him found."
"Aye, Captain."
She slammed the receiver down and headed back toward the ship in haste.
Khym, for the gods' sake. Her mate, gone strolling out in fullest
confidence that papers in order meant safety ... on a stsho trading station,
where weapons were banned, as he had gone out of ship at Urtur and Hoas among
mahendo'sat; as he had gone wandering wherever he liked through the last two
markets -- male, and duty-less and bored. Gods. O gods.
She remembered the kif then, looked back, one injudicious glance over
her shoulder, breaking the rest of her precautions.
The kif was still there, looking her way beyond the gesticulating stsho,
looking black and grim and interested.
She flung around again and moved as fast as a walk could carry her, past
_Mahijiru_ behind its darkened (malfunctioning?) registry board, past one
berth and the other in the chill, stsho-made air.
She was panting in earnest when she came within sight of _The Pride's_
berth. Everything was stopped there. The machinery that ought to be
offloading stood still with cans still on the ramp. Haral was outside waiting
for her, red-gold figure in blue breeches; and spying her, came her way with
scurrying haste.
"Captain--" Haral skidded up and braked, claws raking on the plates.
"We're looking."
"Kif are out," Pyanfar said. That was enough. Haral's ears went flat
and her eyes went wide. "With Ehrran clan in port. I want him back, Haral.
Where'd he talk about going? Doing what?"
"Didn't talk, Captain. We were all busy. He was there by us at the
ramp. When we looked round -- gone."
"Gods rot him!"
"Can't have gotten far."
"Sure he can't." She took the pocket com Haral offered her and clipped
it to her belt to match what Haral had. "Who's on bridge?"
"No one. I stayed. Alone."
"Hilfy's out there."
"First."
"Lock up. Come with me."
"Aye!" Haral snapped, spun on her heel and ran.
Pyanfar strode on.
Market, she reckoned. Meetpoint's famed Free Market was far and away
the likeliest place to look. Baubles and exotics. Things to see.
He might have tried the restaurants before the market.
Or the bars of the Rows.
Gods rot him. Gods rot her soft-headedness in ever taking him aboard.
On Anuurn they called her mad. At times like this she believed it, all the
way.
She was breathing in great side-aching gasps when Haral came pelting
back to fall in at her side.
"He's not here," Hilfy said -- youngest of _The Pride_: her left ear
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
confusion. "Trying to explain to these fellows--"
"Uncle, for the gods' sakes-"
"He is," a hani voice cried from the door. "By the gods -- what's he
doing here?"
Khym flinched, faced about with his back to the bar, starting with
misgiving at the drunken Ayhar spacers.
"Hey!" --A second hani voice, from among the Ayhar. "Chanur! You
crazy, Chanur? What are you up to, huh, bringing him out here? You got no
regard for him?"
"Come on," Hilfy pleaded. "_Na_ Khym--" She tugged at a massive arm,
felt the tension in it. "For gods' sake, _na_ Khym -- we've got an
emergency."
Maybe that got through. Khym shivered, one sharp tremor, like an
earthquake through solid stone.
"Get, get, get!" a stsho shrilled in pidgin. "Get out he my bar!"
Hilfy pulled with all her might. Khym yielded and kept walking, through
the hani crowd that drew aside wide-eyed and muttering, past the black wall of
curious mahendo'sat and the glitter of their gold.
Another black wall formed athwart the brighter, outside light.
Billowing robes blocked the path to the door, two tall, ungainly shapes.
"Chanur," said a kif, a dry clicking voice. "Chanur brings its males
out. It needs help."
Hilfy stopped. Khym had, with a rumbling in his throat. "Don't," Hilfy
said, "don't do it -- Khym, for gods' sakes, just let's get out of here. We
don't want a fight."
"Run," the kif hissed. "_Run_, Chanur. You run from kif before."
"Come on." Hilfy wrapped her arm tightly about Khym's elbow. She guided
him through the crowd toward the doorway, past the first brush of robes,
trying to look noncombatant, trying to watch the whereabouts of dark kifish
hands beneath the dusky cloth.
"Hilfy," said Khym.
She looked up. The whole doorway had filled with kif.
"It's got a knife!" A hani voice. "Look out, kid--"
Something flew, trailing beer and froth, and hit a kifish head. "Got!"
A mahen voice crowed delight. Kif lunged, Khym lunged. Hilfy hit a kif with
claws bared and bodies tangled in the doorway. _Yiiii-yinnnnn_! a stsho
voice wailed above the din. "_Yeeiei-yi_! Police, police, police!"
"Yaooo!" (The mahendo'sat).
"_Na_ Khym!"
Tirun's voice, a roar from outside the tangled doorway, inbound.
"Hilfy! _Na_ Khym! _Chanur_!"
"_Ayhar, ai Ayhar_."
"_Catimin-shai_!"
Mugs and bottles sailed.
* * *
"He's on the Rows! Hurry!" Haral's voice came from the pocket com; and
Pyanfar, delaying for a check of eat-shops outside the market, started to run
for all she was worth, past startled mahendo'sat and stsho who leapt from her
path, herself dodging round the confused course of a methane-breather vehicle
that zigged away on another tack.
Sirens sounded. The three-story bulkhead doors of the market sector
were blinking with red warning lights. She put on a final burst of speed and
dived through asprawl as the valves began to move. The edges met with a boom
and airshock that shook the deck, drowning the din of howls beyond, and she
gathered herself up off the deck plates and ran without even a backward look.
The whole market was in turmoil. Merchants or looters snatched armfuls
of whatever they could; aisles jammed. Animals screeched above the roar. A
black thing darted past Pyanfar's legs and yelped at being trodden on. She
vaulted a counter, scrambled on a rolling scatter of trinkets, found a clear
aisle and ran toward the Rows where a moment's clear sight showed a heaving
mass in the doorway. Stsho darted from that crowd, pale and gibbering;
drunken mahendo'sat stayed to yell odds -- a pair of hani arrived from the
other direction: Chur and Geran headed full tilt toward the mass.
She jerked spectators this way and that, careless of her claws.
Mahendo'sat howled outrage and moved. A kif-shape darted past her, moving
faster than clear sight. She caught at it and got only robe as she broke
through to the center of the mob. Plastic splintered. Glass broke, bodies
rolled underfoot.
More kif ran from the scene, a scatter of black-robed streaks outward
bound at speed.
"Khym!" Pyanfar yelled and flung herself in the path of his wild-eyed
rush after the kif. Behind him Haral and Geran added themselves; Chur and
Tirun followed. Hilfy jumped last, atop the heap on Khym's shoulders as it
all came down in front of her.
They stopped him. They held him down until the struggles ceased.
There was mahen laughter, quickly hushed. In prudence, mahe drew back
to perimeters, while the noise of looting went on in the market, the crash of
glass, the splintering of plastics, the polyglot wails of outrage and avarice.
"Gods rot you!" Pyanfar yelled, with a claws-out swipe at anything too
near. "Get!"
Mahendo'sat gave her room. A small knot of hani spacers stood facing
her. Ears were back. _The Pride_'s crew gained their feet, Haral foremost,
ears laid back and grinning. Khym levered himself to his feet with Tirun
holding fast to his right arm and Hilfy locked to the other side. The last
sounds of combat died inside the bar. A last glass broke.
"Pyanfar Chanur," a broadnosed hani said in stark, disapproving tones.
"Tell it to your captain," said Pyanfar. "Tell it proper. He's my
husband. You hear? _Na_ Khym _nef_ Mahn. Hear me?"
Ears flicked. Eyes showed whites. The news had not gotten this far
out, what lunacy she had done. Now it did. "Sure," a younger hani said,
backing up. "Sure, captain."
And Chur, at her back: "Captain -- we'd better get out of here."
She heard the sirens. She looked about past the melting crowd, who
sought other bars. Trampled bodies stirred within the doorway.
There were cars coming up the dock, with the white strobe flash of
Security.
Chapter Two
The door hissed back and revealed two guards, which at Meetpoint might
have been any oxy-breathing kind but stsho, considering the stsho's congenital
distrust of violence. They hired all their security. Fortunately for the
peace at present, these were both mahendo'sat.
Pyanfar stopped in her pacing of the narrow room -- _waiting area_, they
摘要:

------------------------C.J.CherryhChanur'sVenture(c)1984DAWScienceFictione-textversion1.0------------------------ChapterOneTheencounterofoldfriendswascommonenoughonMeetpointStation,wherehalfadozenspeciescametotrade;andonesucholdfriendcamewalkingPyanfarChanur'swaywhenshehadnomorethanput_ThePride_ind...

展开>> 收起<<
C. J. Cherryh - Chanur 2 - Chanur's Venture.pdf

共115页,预览23页

还剩页未读, 继续阅读

声明:本站为文档C2C交易模式,即用户上传的文档直接被用户下载,本站只是中间服务平台,本站所有文档下载所得的收益归上传人(含作者)所有。玖贝云文库仅提供信息存储空间,仅对用户上传内容的表现方式做保护处理,对上载内容本身不做任何修改或编辑。若文档所含内容侵犯了您的版权或隐私,请立即通知玖贝云文库,我们立即给予删除!
分类:外语学习 价格:5.9玖币 属性:115 页 大小:291.68KB 格式:PDF 时间:2024-12-16

开通VIP享超值会员特权

  • 多端同步记录
  • 高速下载文档
  • 免费文档工具
  • 分享文档赚钱
  • 每日登录抽奖
  • 优质衍生服务
/ 115
客服
关注