C.J. Cherryh. Chanur’s Venture

outsider-ways of thought.

She reached the bridge, opened the security bin beside Haral and took out the

precious packet-committed treason by that if not before. She slammed the bin

shut.

Haral looked round at her, her scarred face quite, quite calm.

Khyrn was there too, just watching, from the side, as staunchly downworld in his

own way as Ehrran’s clan.

Worried. And silent now.

“Got something coming outside,” Haral said, whose eyes and ears were partly The

Pride’s from where she sat. And whose discretion was absolute. “Two minutes,

captain.”

Chapter Eight

She headed down the corridor from the lift in haste, keyed the airlock to

inside-manual and looked back as Hilfy and Chur and Geran came hurrying along

with Tully in their midst.

“Car’s on the dockside,” Harral advised them from the general address. “You

operating that on manual?”

“I’ve got it,” Pyanfar said, touching the pickup by the lock controls. “Just

keep a sharp lookout up there.”

The four arrived, Tully dishevelled looking and disreputable in a white stsho

shirt half tucked into the blue hani trousers. The shirt was far too big, the

trousers too small; and for luggage he clutched a white plastic sack of the

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C. J. Cherryh

kind they used for utility — a change of clothes, toiletries, gods knew what

they had thrown together for him in so short a time.

“Got the translation tapes?”

“Got,” Tully answered for himself, patting the bundle.

“Here.” She handed him the packet. “Tuck that in too. For the gods’ sakes don’t

give it to the mahendo’sat.”

He knew what it was. She saw the disturbed look, the doubt.

“Go on,” she said, and triggered the inner lock. It hissed open with an

exhalation of cold air. “Chur, Hilfy, you watch it. You watch it coming back.

Don’t you walk it. If they don’t give you a car, you call and I’ll see they do.

Tell them priority. Tell them Personage.”

“Right,” said Chur.

She walked into the lock with them, pushed the button for the second door on

alternate-set, so that the first closed behind them. She took no chances. Not

now. The yellow accessway gaped like a ribbed gullet. The chill hit like a wall.

“Hurry it.”

“Pyanfar,” Tully said of a sudden, and turned and balked. She put a hand on his

back and propelled him ahead of her.

“Come on, come on, Tully. It’s all right.” She walked by him with her crewwomen

trailing after, kept her arm at his back and kept him moving down the accessway.

He was cold already. She felt the stiffness in his movements as they hit the

slant and headed down to the rampway. “Won’t be long. Bodies will heat up the

car.” –Chatter to keep him distracted. She saw the gray of the docks like docks

anywhere, the pair of vehicles with the strobes flashing. “Translator’s going to

be out of range awhile, but they’ll get you hooked up again when you get to

station central. There’s an outside chance — a small chance, understand? — it

might be more than twenty hours. Might be, might be — they might have to shift

you to some mahen ship. I don’t think so–”

He balked again as they came down the last few steps, turned and gave her a

panicked look.

“Captain,” Chur said from behind, sharp and urgent: she heard the engines at the

same time, looked toward the sound down the dock.

Another car, headed their way in a great hurry, from up-dock.

“Gods rot,” she muttered, grabbed Tully by the arm and pulled him on. “Fast,

Tully.” The mahendo’sat in the cars got out, excepting the two drivers, one

curly brown, a tasunno mahe, smaller than the others and rare this side of Iji;

an officer and four others the gods-knew-what race of generations-back spacers,

black and tall and bearing badges and sidearms on the usual harness. Not

friendly-looking. Like one black wall. Tully balked again, looked about in panic

as the moving car hummed up and braked, resisted again as two of the mahe

grabbed him and pulled him toward the open door of the second mahen car.

“Pyanfar!” he cried.

Hilfy started forward, but Pyanfar caught her arm and held her as the

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