Authors: Julie E. Czerneda
As I wondered feverishly, the Ervickian cringed and I heard it say quite plainly: “Slothe and his accomplice boarded the
Didjeridoo.
My source was reliable. Did you remember that? I told you—I don’t get messages from that Kraal and ignore them, see.”
Kraal?
I dumped the disturbing but not surprising tidbit into memory—the conspiracy-loving Kraal were prone to having spies in every shipcity, even peaceful ones such as D’Dsel—focusing instead on that name.
Slothe.
On any other night, after any other sequence of events, I might not have made the connection between the word and the alias Paul had used on Ultari Prime. Of course, it didn’t hurt that my memory immediately showed me the face of a certain despicable Ervickian shopkeeper, a face with a definite resemblance around its four beady eyes to the shining example of its race in front of me now.
Oh, dear
, I sighed to myself. Perhaps getting my credits back hadn’t been the wisest move—satisfying as it had been at the time. I should have known the being would take
it personally; I had, having witnessed Paul’s poignant reaction when our brand-new starship turned out to be an ancient taxi.
Of course, Paul’s reaction would be even more memorable when he found out about this.
If
, I added. There was a distinct advantage to selective memory sharing with my Human web-kin. I found myself hoping he’d take a long time to retrieve his mail.
The Human stood with his feet wide apart, as though needing the stability. “Listen, my repulsive little friend,” his voice sounded remarkably as though forced through gritted teeth. “I’m supposed to be filling my ship’s hold, not standing in an empty dock.”
The Ervickian threw its hands into the air. “You worry too much. I told you: my crèche has copies of what was stolen. As for your shopping: my friends back at the
’Gills
have doubtless found all you needed. Did you forget all this?” The concern sounded sincere—Ervickians predictably assumed other species were missing half a brain.
Which would be a more reasonable prejudice
, I reminded myself,
if Ervickians ever used both of theirs.
“Wasn’t it lucky for you?” Able Joe continued happily.
“What? Finding you again?” Definite menace now. “Let’s hope it’s luckier than last time.”
The smaller being danced back out of range, hands protectively over its second mouth as though used to low blows. “How many times can I tell you, Hom Captain? Able Joe’s no cheat—I didn’t send any rats on your trail. You found those on your own.”
Captain?
I pushed my head out a little farther, curious in spite of myself. Any being with a ship could claim that title, but there was something in the way this Human carried himself that suggested the rank was more than self-assumed. Sure enough, the Human wore some type of uniform under that shapeless coat.
“I’d like to find them again,” the captain growled as if to himself.
Not a happy individual
, I thought,
and not one to have for an enemy.
The Ervickian I could see chasing rumors of Megar
Slothe, especially if it thought there was a chance to gain credits out of it.
What was this Human’s interest?
A question I had no intention of asking, relieved when the Human said: “Enough of this. We’ve been misled or we’ve missed him. Either way, I have to report in. Let’s get back to the bar and see if your so-called friends have salvaged anything of tonight.”
The two of them started retracing their steps. On one claw, I was relieved they were going. I’d had visions of Paul marching into the two of them, although to give my Human his due, I doubted he’d be that careless.
That was usually my job.
On the other claw (or three), I remained curious.
Were these two some threat to Paul or just fortune hunters?
I made a mental note to quietly replace the credits I’d canceled from the Ervickian’s crèche at my first opportunity.
They disappeared from sight. I waited another long moment before straightening, two more before walking out to where they’d stood. I carefully retraced some of their steps, my feet tasting nothing but the inorganic background of pavement and solvent, plas and metal.
My peripheral vision caught a flash of movement, giving me enough warning to duck as the Ervickian launched himself at me from his concealment beneath the neighboring starship’s ramp. My Panacian-self, while stiff-bodied, had two very flexible body joints; ducking put me considerably lower than my attacker expected. He flew completely over my head, landing with a doubled grunt on top of a group of servos cleaning up a pile of some moist, oozing material. He wasn’t hurt, as far as I could tell, but didn’t look particularly comfortable either.
I wasn’t planning to stay and find out, but as I turned to run, two powerful arms wrapped around me from behind, pinning all four upper limbs to my sides and lifting me partly off my feet.
No guesses who
, I thought with disgust.
“It’s her! The one in the vid! The one from our store! The cheat! The cheat!” The Ervickian scrambled to its feet, rushing toward me with a very nasty look in all its eyes
and its eight-fingered hands out as though to tear me limb from limb.
That might have been helpful earlier tonight
, I found myself thinking, but was unlikely to do more than break his nails now that I’d hardened.
To my surprise, the Human turned so his shoulder was between us. “Back off,” he warned his companion. “I’ve got her.” This with an unnecessary squeeze, as though to remind me of my own capture.
I drew a very deep breath through all my spiracles at once. “Hoodlums!” I bellowed. “Murderers!” The volume a Panacian could achieve with air-filled tracheae had to be heard to be believed. “Robbers!”
It was a very effective strategy, sending the Ervickian running down the shipway as fast as he could shuffle and the Human desperately trying to find some way to shut me up without hurting his apparently already sore hands. As my vocal organs were located behind four sets of feeding mandibles—serrated feeding mandibles—he wasn’t doing very well. He cursed almost as loudly as I was shouting, then started shaking me.
This wasn’t pleasant, but wasn’t much of a deterrent to this form either—especially when I realized he was carefully controlling the force he used. I began to enjoy myself, and drew in air for another set of loud pleas for hopefully nonexistent help.
Which I didn’t make, having the business end of a stunner suddenly pressed against the dome of my right eye. The Human took advantage of my sudden silence to say in a ragged, desperate voice: “Please stop shouting. I don’t want to hurt you. I’m looking for someone—”
“Then maybe I’ll do,” said a voice I hardly recognized as Paul’s. The stunner fell away as my captor obviously felt its value somewhat limited compared to the biodisrupter caressing his cheek. “Don’t turn around.”
My captor obeyed, standing perfectly still, face-to-face with me. This close, I could see the fine lines pain, and the effort of fighting it, had drawn around his eyes and lips. There was a narrow, feather-edged band of red slashing from his hairline and down to follow a
cheekbone—
blister burn
, I realized, wincing in sympathy. It didn’t seem to matter. There was a hot gleam in his eyes as he looked back at me and mouthed a word that might have been “Ragem.”
I stepped beyond his reach, then couldn’t help wrapping my limbs around my thorax.
This was
, I decided,
one of those times when being rescued was probably the worst thing that could happen.
Paul stood behind the stranger, his face hidden in the masker hood, the hand holding the deadly weapon servo-steady. Then, it started to shake, something that made me—and from the look on his face, Paul’s captive—understandably anxious. “What did he do to you?” Paul demanded. “Are you all right?”
At first, I assumed he was reading the distress in my posture—for his species, Paul was superb at interpreting body language—and straightened to reassure him, a movement which involved my dented body parts. I clicked several mouth parts, the equivalent to a Human’s wince.
Paul swore and pushed the Human violently to the pavement. The Human didn’t struggle—no sane being did when threatened by what my friend carried.
“Oh,” I said with sudden understanding. I looked down at my damaged carapace and would have blushed in several other forms.
Or regurgitated.
The physiological signs of embarrassment were typically demeaning. “No. He didn’t do this. I—had a little accident earlier. I’m fine. In fact,” I added slowly, “he protected me from his partner.”
The Human at my feet lifted his face to gaze up at me, his expression—what I could see of it—oddly puzzled.
What had he expected
, I thought irritably to myself.
That I’d demand his head or other body parts?
“You’re sure,” Paul persisted, tipping his own head from side to side as though trying to figure out what kind of accident I could have had since he’d left by examining the pattern of bumps. “That looks—awful.”
Such honesty, I didn’t need.
I waved all four upper arms in proof. “Yes. I’m fine! Can we get out of here?”
Paul nudged our prisoner with his toe. “We’ll have to do something to make sure he’s not on our tails,” he said,
in a return to that cold, ruthless voice. I’d have been alarmed, but I could see my friend putting away the deadly biodisrupter, exchanging it for the stunner he’d taken from the Human’s hand.
The Human continued to stare up at me, such implacable determination in his eyes I couldn’t have looked away if I’d tried. He spoke, but his words were directed at the one he couldn’t see: “Paul Antoni Ragem. The Traitor. Kill me, if that’s what you’ve become, but the time for secrets is over. Someone else will track you down—” he slumped as Paul fired the stunner.
Paul immediately knelt beside him, turning the limp Human over so he could see the face. “Thought so,” he said grimly.
“You know him?” I asked, bending myself to try unsuccessfully to match this face to a memory.
There were
, I thought practically,
too many Humans to meet even in my lifetime.
Paul pulled off his hood, his face reassuringly normal as he looked at me: annoyed and slightly frustrated. “This is Rudy Lefebvre. Captain Lefebvre.”
I knew the name.
Kearn’s captain.
I curled involuntarily into a tight ball of misery. “First the Feneden. Now this. How is Kearn getting so close to us all of a sudden? What’s happening? We were safe!”
“And you were going with the Iftsen,” Paul reminded me unnecessarily. He glanced around, adding the stunner to the arsenal in his shirt. We were alone, the servos chattering whimsy to themselves as they adjusted their paths to avoid us and Lefebvre’s crumpled body. “We’ll have to leave him here. He’ll be all right.” Paul went over to a large carrysack he must have tossed to one side when he saw me being shaken by Lefebvre.
“But—” I stopped, unable to say it out loud.
Paul’s teeth caught some of the nearby light as he smiled at me. “Stop worrying. Lefebvre was guessing—fishing for your reaction. He didn’t see me. He doesn’t know you. There’s no evidence. The best thing we can do is leave him to try and explain to Kearn what—ah.” The soft exclamation
accompanied his pulling a large bottle from the sack. He opened it and began pouring its contents over Lefebvre’s clothing. I straightened and stood, backing up so the alcohol fumes wouldn’t scald my spiracles. “Sorry about this,” Paul said to the unconscious Human, before holding the bottle to Lefebvre’s lips and pouring some of the drink into his mouth until Lefebvre gagged and swallowed by reflex.
“Let’s go. And while we do,” Paul said to me sternly, taking his carrysack under one arm and putting the other firmly around my shoulders to urge me in his chosen direction, “I’ll give you a choice, old bug. You can start by explaining how—after I leave you safe and sound on a ship—that ship’s not here and you still are. Or, you can tell me how, marvelous hider that you are, you wind up in the clutches of our enemy. Or,” he paused and sighed theatrically.
“Maybe you’d best begin with this little accident.”
Not my first choice
, I thought glumly.
“WHAT do you mean, he’s not back yet?” Kearn knew something would happen. It always did. Just when everything was starting to go his way, when things were finally moving in the right direction, someone deliberately and maliciously sabotaged him. This time it was Lefebvre. “Find him!”
Timri didn’t look pleased, but then again, no one on the
Russell III
was in a good mood. The crew they’d managed to find had returned grudgingly, noisily, and, in one case, with unfortunate consequences inside the air lock, most heading straight to the med room for anti-intoxicants or to their cabins to sleep.
“Do you really want me to call Port Authority, sir?” she said with an effort, rubbing grit from her eyes. Much more of this, and none of them would be in a fit state to take the
Russ’
offworld tomorrow—
today
, she corrected herself, with a dismayed glance at the chrono behind Kearn’s desk. “The Jellies who brought the Captain here after he was attacked probably haven’t finished their report yet.”
Kearn, well-used to the results of looking the fool to the local authorities, almost cringed. “Yes. Yes. Good point, Comp-tech. Send someone—”
Security Officer Sas, a silent mound of dirty white fur until now, made a hissing sound through his yellowed fangs. “To look where?” he demanded, the hiss and spit moderated into comspeak through the implant in his throat. “There’s no return address on the goods that arrived
for the Feneden. The beings who delivered them say they don’t know Captain Lefebvre—they were sent to fill the list by some third party they didn’t know either.”
“Quite conveniently,” Timri added, “to be paid by us.”
“They would not have left the supplies otherwise,” Sas hissed, continuing the argument they’d brought into his quarters.
“At least we know Captain Lefebvre was on the job,” Kearn said, cheered by this reminder that the fussier needs of his much-anticipated passengers would be met, if not by the implication of Lefebvre dealing in the shadier areas of the marketplace. “But he knows I can’t have him being late and holding up the ship. Remind me to put him on report when he shows. He’s probably at some bar, becoming useless.”