C.J. Cherryh. Chanur’s Venture

She walked past nine, eight, seven. She saw no activity outside The Pride. No

sign of any loaders, the cargo ramp withdrawn, the canisters missing. The cans

were inside, she hoped. She kept alert for any sight of kif on the docks and

found none. The few passersby with business on the dock were mostly stsho, a few

mahendo’sat, no hani. If they noticed the rare spectacle of a hani captain being

trailed by two hulking mahendo’sat station guards, they gave no sign of it. This

was Meetpoint, after all, where folk minded their business, knowing well how

trouble tended to travel down line of sight. At the upward-curved limit of the

horizon, only its bottom third visible, the great seal of the market zone was

still shut, on gods knew what kind of damage. Money was being lost while that

market was out of action. Hourly the tab went up.

The Pride’s ramp access gaped ahead, berth six. She ignored her escort, not even

looking back at them as she took out the pocket com. “Haral. I’m coming in.”

No answer.

“Haral.” She walked up the rampway into the chill, yellow-lighted access,

hearing no footsteps behind — walked warily, thinking of kif ambush even here.

Ambush and stsho treacheries.

She met a shut hatch beyond the bend of the tube. She had expected that, and hit

the bar of the com unit in the accessway. “Haral. Haral, gods rot it, it’s

Pyanfar. Open up.”

The hatch shot open at once, with a waft of warmer, familiar air. Tirun was

there; and Chur, appearing armed from the lower-deck ops room down the corridor.

Both showed the plasmed seams of recent wounds on their red-brown hides, Chur

with a stripe of plasm visible across the leather of her nose, a painful kind of

cut.

“Huh.” She walked in past the lock. “Close that. Everyone aboard?”

“All accounted for, nothing serious.”

She came to a stop and gave Tirun one long stare. “Nothing serious. Gods and

thunders, cousin!”

Tirun’s ears fell. “On our side,” Tirun said.

“Huh.” She turned and stalked for the lift, with their company as the inner lock

hissed shut at her back. “Where’s Khym?”

“Na Khym’s up in his quarters.”

“Good.” She shoved that distress to the hindmost, swung about in the lift as

they got in with her. Chur anticipated her reach for the button, tucked her arm

behind her again in haste when she had pushed it. Pyanfar glared at her. “What

else is wrong? What’s Haral doing up there?”

“Got a lot of messages in,” said Tirun. “Still coming. Board’s jammed.”

“Huh.” The lift slammed upward. Pyanfar studied the door in front of her till it

opened and spat them out on main, then strode for the bridge with a cousin on

either side. “Who’s called in?”

“Stsho, mostly,” Chur said. “One message from Ayhar’s Prosperity. Banny Ayhar

requests conference at soonest.”

“And some mahen nonsense,” said Tirun. “No ship code.”

She gave Tirun a second hard look, caught the lowered ears, the tension round

the nose. She snorted, walked on into the bridge where Haral stood to meet her,

where Hilfy got up from com– o gods, Hilfy –with her side patched in bandages.

Geran with her right ear plasmed along a rip.

“You all right?” Haral asked. “We got a message from stsho central . . . said

you were coming.”

“How courteous of them. They give you any trouble?”

“Kept us locked up filling out forms,” said Geran. “Sent us out about an hour

ago.”

“Huh.” She sat down in her own place, at The Pride’s controls, swung the chair

about in its pit to look at the solemn row of faces. Hilfy, her niece, young and

white about the eyes just now. Haral and Tirun, tall, wide shouldered, daughters

of an elder Chanur cousin; Geran and Chur, wiry and deft, daughters to Jofan

Chanur, her third cousins. A row of earnest, sober stares. She gazed last and

steadily at her brother Kohan’s favorite daughter, at Hilfy Chanur par Faha with

a scratch down her comely nose and her ears, gods forfend — plasm on a nick in

the left one. Heir to Chanur’s mercantile operations, while-and-likely-after

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